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Sight Lines
Two homes have the same square footage yet one seems so
much larger than the other does. How can that be? The
difference is because of sight lines. Sight lines are what
you see from any given point in the home, whether you're
standing in a doorway or seated in a room. When sight
lines are obstructed by a wall or a door the home will
feel smaller. Open things up with a hint of what lies
beyond and the home will always look and live larger.
You can check a home's sight lines with the floor plan, a
ruler, and a pencil. Start from the middle of any doorway
or opening and draw a straight line to various focal
points in the home. Does the line stop in that room or
does it pass through several? Does it intersect a
featureless wall or will you get a glimpse of a fireplace
or a window and the courtyard beyond? Then check the sight
lines from various sitting positions in the home. What
will you see from the breakfast table? The family room
sofa? From your bed as you read the Sunday papers? As you
move through a home, it's far more interesting to get a
preview of what's to come with subtle hints and intriguing
clues of the spaces beyond than to be cut off from the
rest of the home.
Traffic Patterns
The success of a floor plan isn't judged by how it looks
when you're standing still or seated. The true measure of
a floor plan is how you move through it. These days, we
rarely use hallways to move from one space to another.
They waste space and they're dreary. Now other rooms have
become our passageways. This has the added advantage of
making small space rooms seem larger when they are open to
other rooms with good sight lines. But when you walk from
the master bedroom to the kitchen, do you want to walk
between the sofa and the TV? If your master is upstairs,
do you want to walk down the stairs and pass through the
entry in your pajamas to get a glass of water?
The best floor plans use a technique called horizontal
banding to accommodate traffic patterns. If, for example,
the family room is flanked on one side by a master bedroom
and on the other side by the kitchen, the doors or
openings should be kept to the same side of the home. If
not, you create a traffic pattern that forces one to
navigate diagonally through another room. In this case,
the family room. It can also make furniture placement more
difficult. A stairway from the entry may not be very
practical, either. It's sometimes a better idea to have it
come to the family room or kitchen toward the center of
the home for better access and a better use of space. And
don't settle for just one way in to the kitchen. This is
the heart of the home. The more ways in, the merrier. You
don't want bottlenecks during parties and family
gatherings. A good rule of thumb is three ways in,
minimum. Five is even better.
Privacy and Togetherness
The relative placement of rooms can play a major role in
how a home lives. Do you really want your children's
bedrooms directly over the master bedroom? We all love our
children but there are times when even the closest of
families need their privacy. The master shouldn't be too
close to the family room, either. With the popularity of
surround sound, TVs have become louder and more pervasive.
The best plans keep the master at a comfortable distance
from other activities in the home, ideally in its own wing
with nothing above or below and no common walls.
Not all room adjacency issues deal with privacy. Sometimes
it's about togetherness. For example, kitchens should not
isolate the person preparing the meal. Eat-in kitchens are
great places to bring families and friends together. By
combining food preparation and dining we create wonderful
opportunities for conversation and closeness.
The game room concept is changing, too. Instead of just
converting an extra bedroom, families are finding
children's retreats to be far more useful. A children's
retreat consists of a common recreation/study that serves
as the hub of the children's activities and is surrounded
by their bedrooms. This area of the home becomes a special
place just for the kids, where they can do their homework,
play games or watch TV while mom and dad enjoy some quiet
time with a movie or reading by the family room fire.
All About Windows
It doesn't take a lot of windows to make an impact on the
personality of a home. You just need to know where to put
them. And as you may have guessed, sight lines play a
large role here, too. An expansive rear wall in the family
room doesn't have to be filled with two-story windows to
bring in the beauty of the outdoors. Even a 20-foot
vaulted ceiling doesn't call for windows all the way to
the top. Besides wasting a lot of energy, it may not
improve the look and feel of the room. A
strategically-placed set of six or eight-foot windows can
have just as much impact and be far more economical.
Sometimes small windows under cabinets can have a huge
influence on the "feel" of a kitchen. A bow bay
window in a small dining area will make it seem much
larger. Pay special attention to the interior/exterior
relationship created with windows. What direction does the
window face? Will it give morning or afternoon light? You
may want eastern exposure for a breakfast room window that
frames colorful landscaping bathed in morning light. Large
windows with western exposure may not be a good idea for a
family room with a large screen TV. Fancy
"eyebrow" and Palladian windows can add
character to any home. They also add to the cost. So, be
sure they are located where they will have the greatest
impact and not hidden away where people can't enjoy them
every day.
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