Renovating
Home Rethink: 5 Ways to Create Extra Living Space
Repurposing rooms can really make the most of what your house already has to offer
So, you’ve come to the realisation that your home is no longer the perfect fit for you or your family. Something is missing, you need more space, or your house just doesn’t feel just right anymore.
It’s easy to jump to the conclusion that a new home or a large addition is the best option. We are trained as modern consumers to discard something when it’s no longer useful or practical and buy the next big thing (new iPhone, anyone?). But why not simply evaluate your needs and your current space and make smaller adjustments to create the home you want today? Here’s how.
It’s easy to jump to the conclusion that a new home or a large addition is the best option. We are trained as modern consumers to discard something when it’s no longer useful or practical and buy the next big thing (new iPhone, anyone?). But why not simply evaluate your needs and your current space and make smaller adjustments to create the home you want today? Here’s how.
1. Gain an office space
That guest room you never use could be the new office you so desperately want. Change the bed to a wall bed and all of a sudden you have a space you can use year round – and still have guests over.
That guest room you never use could be the new office you so desperately want. Change the bed to a wall bed and all of a sudden you have a space you can use year round – and still have guests over.
3. Gain a homework nook
You need a spot for your kids to do their homework and use the computer outside of their rooms so you can monitor internet activity. Why not purge those moving boxes and convert that forgotten closet space into a computer station the whole family can use? This one works beautifully.
You need a spot for your kids to do their homework and use the computer outside of their rooms so you can monitor internet activity. Why not purge those moving boxes and convert that forgotten closet space into a computer station the whole family can use? This one works beautifully.
Even a stair landing could be an inviting homework nook.
4. Gain a wine cellar
Too often, we find our clients stuck with expectations as to what things should be like and what others will want. They bought a house with a formal living room at the front and a family room out the back. They never formally entertain, but they feel compelled to have a formal living room that sits empty. Why not make it into something else? If you are avid wine collectors, make it a tasting room. If you run a home business, make it an office. Make your home what you want. Space is space; it’s how you define it for yourself that will set the tone for its use.
Too often, we find our clients stuck with expectations as to what things should be like and what others will want. They bought a house with a formal living room at the front and a family room out the back. They never formally entertain, but they feel compelled to have a formal living room that sits empty. Why not make it into something else? If you are avid wine collectors, make it a tasting room. If you run a home business, make it an office. Make your home what you want. Space is space; it’s how you define it for yourself that will set the tone for its use.
5. Gain a drop zone
A mudroom could be created by simply extending kitchen cabinets through your breakfast or family room and creating a bench for removing shoes along with some closet space for jackets.
A mudroom could be created by simply extending kitchen cabinets through your breakfast or family room and creating a bench for removing shoes along with some closet space for jackets.
Final piece of advice
We are bombarded with TV shows and magazines that promote the idea that we should consider the next buyer of our home when making design decisions. Unless you plan on staying in your home for less than five years, throw that thought out the window fast.
Anything you paint, install or refurbish today will most likely be out of style within five years. Consider the things you decided would have to change when you bought your current home. You can be certain that the people you bought it from thought it was fantastic and that you would not change a thing. The same will be true of the next owners.
We all can remember the aunt that covered her couch in plastic, or a grandmother that left the plastic film on the lampshade in the fancy living room with the white carpeting. All they did was miss out on the opportunity of enjoying their items or their rooms to the fullest.
We are bombarded with TV shows and magazines that promote the idea that we should consider the next buyer of our home when making design decisions. Unless you plan on staying in your home for less than five years, throw that thought out the window fast.
Anything you paint, install or refurbish today will most likely be out of style within five years. Consider the things you decided would have to change when you bought your current home. You can be certain that the people you bought it from thought it was fantastic and that you would not change a thing. The same will be true of the next owners.
We all can remember the aunt that covered her couch in plastic, or a grandmother that left the plastic film on the lampshade in the fancy living room with the white carpeting. All they did was miss out on the opportunity of enjoying their items or their rooms to the fullest.
Your home is your largest investment, the place where you spend most of your time and is the family hub. So enjoy it – don’t be afraid to make it yours.
WE’D LIKE TO HEAR FROM YOU…
Have you made creative use of an underused space? Please tell us about it in the comments section below.
WE’D LIKE TO HEAR FROM YOU…
Have you made creative use of an underused space? Please tell us about it in the comments section below.
Make a list of all the rooms in your home. If you have plans of them, even better, as you’ll have the dimensions. Look at each room, and write down what you use it for.
Now write down how often you use the space for its intended purpose. You might be surprised that you use that guest room only two or three times a year. Also, that formal dining room hosts a celebratory dinner four times a year, and that hall closet has boxes in it that you moved from your last house and haven’t opened since.
These are all wasted spaces, so why not make better use of them? Repurposing a room and redesigning within your existing home’s footprint is always cheaper than building an addition.
Next, make a list of the rooms you wish you had in your home. Compare the two lists and see if any room could have a dual purpose. And can you live without any of the room purposes you currently have?
Following are five ways to repurpose, recycle and reuse the rooms you may already have.