Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spent the past decade in a home with individual rooms and a separate kitchen. I loved it and it worked for me. I recall it was the ONLY home I toured back then that didn't have an open concept kitchen; they ALL did.
I'm now trying to sell this house and everyone STILL wants an open concept kitchen. The trend is not gone. Just something to consider if you ever think you may sell the house.
It is not a trend. It is simply a preference many people have. For me a closed off kitchen is a dealbreaker. But as you can see in this thread there seem to be many who like it and you should be able to find your buyer.
How is it not a trend when 90% new houses have it?
Anonymous wrote:Trends come and trends go. Get the kitchen that appeals to you instead of following the herd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I split the house into 2 conceptual sections: formal vs informal.
Formal is mostly at the front of the house and includes the entry hall, living room, dining room, study, and butler’s pantry. There I want walls and doors. If we are entertaining, then I want to be able to cook in private, and then I will serve meals to guests via the butler’s pantry. I do not want guests in the entry hall to see or hear things in the back of the house, so doors are helpful.
Informal is at the rear of the house and includes the kitchen with a breakfast table and the den. There I want things to be more open. I want to be able to watch children in the den from the kitchen, for example to limit screen time, and so on.
We have both a front formal staircase up and also a rear informal staircase to the children’s play room over the garage. Both basement stairs are behind doors which can be locked.
In the end, do whatever makes you happy.
How often are you serving your guests meals that are this formal where people aren’t supposed to be aware of the kitchen or any cooking and how old are you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spent the past decade in a home with individual rooms and a separate kitchen. I loved it and it worked for me. I recall it was the ONLY home I toured back then that didn't have an open concept kitchen; they ALL did.
I'm now trying to sell this house and everyone STILL wants an open concept kitchen. The trend is not gone. Just something to consider if you ever think you may sell the house.
It is not a trend. It is simply a preference many people have. For me a closed off kitchen is a dealbreaker. But as you can see in this thread there seem to be many who like it and you should be able to find your buyer.
How is it not a trend when 90% new houses have it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spent the past decade in a home with individual rooms and a separate kitchen. I loved it and it worked for me. I recall it was the ONLY home I toured back then that didn't have an open concept kitchen; they ALL did.
I'm now trying to sell this house and everyone STILL wants an open concept kitchen. The trend is not gone. Just something to consider if you ever think you may sell the house.
It is not a trend. It is simply a preference many people have. For me a closed off kitchen is a dealbreaker. But as you can see in this thread there seem to be many who like it and you should be able to find your buyer.
Anonymous wrote:I spent the past decade in a home with individual rooms and a separate kitchen. I loved it and it worked for me. I recall it was the ONLY home I toured back then that didn't have an open concept kitchen; they ALL did.
I'm now trying to sell this house and everyone STILL wants an open concept kitchen. The trend is not gone. Just something to consider if you ever think you may sell the house.
Anonymous wrote:Our current house is a bit of a hybrid and I like it a lot. The kitchen is semi-open to the family room, but it is closed off from the dining and the living room.
Anonymous wrote:I have a 1965 house with a 1995 kitchen and I love the layout. Its somewhere in between open and closed with the wall in the middle and the kitchen, dining sitting area and living room looped around. I need to redo the kitchen at some point, but I likely won't change the floor plan!