I don’t like open floor plan either. I but renovated my kitchen to remain closed off. I wish I’d widened the doorway to dining room a bit more, but I don’t think there’s anything wrong with a contained kitchen, especially if you live in an older home where architecturally it makes sense. You can probably do something that’s a middle ground.
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Never |
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I’ve read several interviews with architects suggesting that the pandemic has killed open plan.people who still want that feeling are putting in pocket doors. |
If you've got a return vent in/near your kitchen, the smells will be carried throughout your house no matter how 'closed' your floor plan is. It's why I (like the South Asian/Indian PP) shut off the HVAC if we're cooking something pungent or greasy. My bedroom is in the furthest part of the house from the kitchen and even with all the doors closed, I can still smell when my DH makes coffee in the morning because the smell is carried through the ducts. |
Does having a huge range hood solve this? We’re considering work on our kitchen and I’m wondering if getting the 36” range hood would help. |
Not sure. We have 48” pro hood. It helps if you open up the kitchen window also. No smells ever in newer, large open floor home. |
An open floor plan was not on our wish list. We live in a center-hall colonial with the living room on one side of the staircase and the kitchen/dining table on the other side. The tiny kitchen wouldn't have worked for us, but taking down the wall between kitchen and dining made it open and comfortable. We don't cook with lots of spices a lot, but when we do you can smell it coming down the stairs and in the center hallway, but that's about it. |
I have a different reason for liking my separate spaces...I love color and don’t want to commit to one wall color for more than one room. I also love that my dining room doesn’t have a view into my kitchen.
I had an open plane when I lived in a condo and also loved that. I don’t think that will go anywhere |
I don't think MOST people will want a closed off kitchen ever again. It's not how most people socialize and entertain anymore and it's not how most people prefer to spend time as a family.
Please note I did not say all. Yes, I know some of you are very happy to be in your kitchens alone for large stretches of time and never want guests to see your kitchen. We just completed and moved into a new build and we have a first floor with a closed off home office, a closed off living room/study (which could be a dining room if a future owner wanted to use it that way), and an open kitchen/dining/family room. For us, a formal dining room would never be used and a waste of space for how we live our life. I think the best you can do is plan your space for you with an eye toward making it easy to change it in the future, if the need arises. |
Really? You really overhear children discussing this? If so, that is totally weird. And yes, I drive carpool a lot too. |
You need open plan so that you can talk on the phone all day as you wander the house, secure in the knowldmedge that no matter you go, you prevent everyone from doing anything except listen your half of your repetitive conversations constantly. |
Right, children should not drink, smoke, or make any observations about the world around them before age 21. But, those pesky rapscallions do so anyway, and we hear the because we live in an open floor plan. |
Does he have staff to keep it clean, or does he just like to pretend to be wealthy? |
Which mfg and model for the fan? |