Open-Plan Areas, Part 1
Taking full advantage of the space available in an open-plan living area calls for a thoughtful approach to arranging the furniture and the interior decorations in order to accommodate a variety of activities.
In some homes, an open-plan living area is built into the layout of the ground floor area by design; in others, walls have to be knocked through to combine two or more small rooms into one large open area. In a restricted space, the absence of clearly defined rooms produces an illusion of spaciousness and makes a greater floor area available. In larger homes, an unpartitioned layout engenders a feeling of unlimited space with limitless design potential.
When decorating an open-plan area, you are aiming not only to create an attractive-looking room but also to make the large living space workable. You may have the luxury of a fabulous amount of space to play with but, unless you have a very large house, you also have to fit a lot of activities into it – certainly living and dining facilities and sometimes the hall, stairs, and/or kitchen, too. So in your planning you need to allow for socializing, watching television, relaxing, working, and dining - in some cases maybe even cooking and sleeping as well.
It helps to get the layout of the activity areas and the furniture placement sorted out before you finalize the color scheme and soft furnishings. You can demarcate functional areas within the broader scheme using furniture, flooring, lighting, or screens. Then you can use colors and patterns either to unify the various zones or to reinforce their moods and functions. Time spent at an early stage, working out how the open-plan area will look and function, makes the world of difference to the ease with which you can use it.
Division of Space
The key to a successful open-plan layout lies in keeping it simple. Sometimes your freedom to maneuver is limited. The location of a fireplace, for example, largely determines the best place to site the easy seating. Windows, doors, and other rooms also impose themselves on the layout of the space. For instance, it makes sense to site the dining section at the end of the area nearer the kitchen. If possible, it is pleasant to position the dining table near a window where it will catch die sunshine at breakfast time. On the other hand, you want to place the television where the screen doesn’t catch the glare of the sun through a window.
Arranging Furniture
A few well-chosen pieces of furniture - a sofa, a dining table and chairs, maybe a desk, side tables, and storage units - are preferable to crowding the space. Strategically positioned, they help to create a structure for the area and accommodate all the people using it. A sofa bed offers the sleeping option. Ample storage makes it easier to preserve an uncluttered look.
Practical positioning: Arrange the furniture so that people will use it rather than reorganizing it every time the room is occupied.
Traffic flow: It is important to work out a convenient traffic flow through the whole room. When the open-plan living area is the only route from the front door to the kitchen, you want to avoid having to make a detour around a table or cutting across a group of armchairs to get there.
Creating zones: A table, chest, sofa, or sideboard placed across the open-plan space sets up a spatial and visual break to differentiate activity zones without destroying the sensation of roominess.
Organizing the dining area: If you prefer to use most of the open-plan area as one large living room, a folding dining table that you can push against a wall until you need it is a good idea. When you want a distinct dining section, instead of leaving the dining table surrounded by chairs, disperse some to other parts of the room for a more informal look and extra seating.
Creating Dividers
If you find you need more privacy in a particular area of the living space, erect a formal room divider. Before rushing into building a permanent divider or buying a freestanding screen, experiment with an improvized divider to make certain that the new arrangement fits the bill. Floor-to-ceiling curtains, for example, drawn across between two sections of the room, muffle sound and create a sense of division and coziness. You must position the partition carefully so that it does not cut across a window, make a room disagreeably dark, slice into an elegant plastered ceiling, or obstruct movement around the room.
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