Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For the 2 million plus price point, I would make sure there is a room someone could use as a formal dining room, but I would use it differently.
$2m pp? You get crap for $2m now. This is not year 2010.
Anonymous wrote:For the 2 million plus price point, I would make sure there is a room someone could use as a formal dining room, but I would use it differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mistake. Doing rooms are making a comeback
No they're not. They've been cashed in for offices or guest rooms for quite some time now. Most people do not want a formal dining room anymore.
It’s swung back again. Dining rooms are en vogue for multimillion dollar properties. Maybe not smaller homes that have to maximize efficiency?
Anonymous wrote:White Americans don’t have dinner parties anymore. A formal dining room is pretty much obsolete!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mistake. Doing rooms are making a comeback
No they're not. They've been cashed in for offices or guest rooms for quite some time now. Most people do not want a formal dining room anymore.
[/b]Anonymous[b wrote:]That would be awful, but you do you. We yse the dining room daily.
Anonymous wrote:Our formal dining room really functions as a study space. The kids have books and papers everywhere. One DC is into art, so it’s also a great studio space. For our family, it’s really nice to have this big with Take that we don’t need to clear off at dinner. I’d carve some kind of unique space next to the kitchen. It could be a study, a library, a sunroom, or a playroom. It just needs to be big enough to fit a table and 8 chairs when you stage the house to sell.
Anonymous wrote:Mistake. Doing rooms are making a comeback
Anonymous wrote:If I were building a house I would not include a formal dining room. It's simply not the way we live anymore.