Get What You Want From the House You Have

Therefore, you’ve come to the understanding that your house is no more the perfect match for you or your loved ones. Something is lacking, you need more space, or your home just doesn’t feel exactly right anymore.

It’s easy to jump to the conclusion that a new home or a massive addition is the best option. We’re trained as consumers to discard something when it is no more practical or useful and buy the upcoming big thing (iPhone 5, anyone?) .

Why not simply evaluate your requirements and your present area and create smaller adjustments to create the home you need now?

Living2Design

Rethinking Your House: How to Begin

Make a list of All of the rooms in your home. For those who have plans of this , even better. Look at each area, and write down what you use it to get.

Now write down how often you use the space for its intended function. You might be amazed that you simply use that guest area just two or three times a year.

That formal dining area hosts a celebratory dinner four times a year, which hallway cupboard has boxes inside that you moved from your final house and have not opened since. These are wasted spaces. Why don’t you make much better use of them? Repurposing a room and redesigning within your current home’s footprint is always cheaper than building an addition.

Next, create a list of those rooms that you would like you had in your home. Compare the two lists, and determine if anything can have a dual function. Would you live without at least one of these rooms?

Here are just two ways to repurpose, recycle and decorate the area you may already have.

Valet Custom Cabinets & Closets

Found office area. That guest area you never use could be the newest office you so desperately desire. Change the bed into a Murphy bed, and all of a sudden you’ve got a space you can use year round — and have guests.

Grainda Builders, Inc..

Found family room. That large dining area with those large windows can develop into the living room you always desired. It’s close to the kitchen and has plenty of space for a sofa and a media cabinet. Maybe all you want to do is knock a wall down and connect the former dining area to the kitchen.

Modern Craft Construction, LLC

Found homework nook. You require a place for your children to do homework and use the computer out their rooms so that you can monitor Internet activity.

Why not purge those moving boxes and convert that closet into a computer channel the entire family can use?

CWB Architects

A stair landing could be an inviting homework place.

NF interiors

Found wine cellar. Too often we find our clients stuck with expectations as to what things ought to be and that which others may desire. They bought a home with a formal living room up front and also a family room in rear. They formally entertain, but they feel compelled to have a formal living area that stays empty. Why don’t you make it in to something else? You’re enthusiastic wine collectors; make it a tasting room. You run a house business; make it a professional office. Make your house what you desire. Space is distance; it is the way you set it for yourself which can set the tone for its usage.

SPACE Architects + Planners

Found drop zone. A mudroom could be created by simply extending kitchen cabinets through your breakfast or family room and generating a seat and cupboard space.

SPACE Architects + Planners

Found laundry area. A small closet could develop into a second laundry area with sufficient space for a table.

Mal Corboy Design

Put Resale Fears in Perspective

We’re bombarded with TV shows and magazines which foster the concept that we ought to consider the following buyer of our house when making design decisions. If you don’t intend on staying in your house for over five decades, throw that idea out the window quickly.

Whatever you paint, install or refurbish today will probably be out of fashion within five decades. Think about the things you chose would have to change when you bought your current home. You can be sure that the people you bought it from thought it was fantastic and that you wouldn’t change a thing. The same will be true of the upcoming owners.

Most of us can recall the aunt that covered her sofa in plastic, or a grandmother that left the plastic film about the lampshade from the fancy living area with the white carpet. They all did was miss out on the opportunity of enjoying something that they loved.

Natasha Barrault Design

Your home is your largest investment, the location in which you spend most of your time and also the heart of your loved ones. So appreciate it don’t be afraid to make it all yours.

Tell us Do you done your own thing with your home’s design? Have you made creative use of an under-used area? Please tell us about this below.

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