Anonymous wrote:Our rowhouse has kitchen --> dining room ---> living room. Unusual, but I've actually seen a few others where the kitchen is in the front room. I have mixed feelings about it. We bought the house with this layout and even if we had strong feelings about moving the kitchen to the rear of the house, it probably wouldn't be worth it.
There are pros and cons to this set-up. Pro: I really like having the living room in the rear of the house. We have French doors that open right onto the deck and patio, and it's lovely to have the view of our garden. The house faces south so the living room gets the best light. Even though there are houses on other side of the alley, it's actually more private than if the living room was at the front of the house. We live in a busy neighborhood that gets a lot of foot traffic at all hours of the day and night. People are constantly strolling by and looking into the houses from the sidewalk. We don't spend as much time in the kitchen as we do the living room, so the lack of privacy in the kitchen isn't too terrible.
Con: it's an unusual layout and I wonder if that will impact resale if we ever move. Also, while we have a small foyer and a hallway leading toward the back of the house, the kitchen is the first room you see when walking into the house. You don't immediately walk into it upon entering the house, but it's right there.
Our dining room is in the middle, which seems pretty standard. In a rowhouse, I think you almost have to have the kitchen and dining room next to each other, regardless of where in the floorplan those two rooms are. Otherwise you are forced to walk through the living room to get from the kitchen to the dining room or vice versa.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry if this has already been brought up, but do you worry about having the bathroom door right off the current living room? We use the middle room as the dining room, and the bathroom door is directly off of it. It's always been a sore point. I'm just wondering if you ever worried about maybe one day flipping the rooms and then being stuck with a bathroom door right off the dining room.
Yes, it is not ideal. However, in my opinion there is no ideal spot on the first floor of a rowhouse for the bathroom. The floor space is simply restrictive.
I've seen them:
1. all the way at the back of the house (sort of behind the kitchen) which blocks the flow of the light from the rear of the house. Like this house. The bathroom is behind the tiled wall.
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2. Underneath the stairs (in the dining or living room), like mine is. Not ideal because you have to exit right into the room. In perusing a ton of listings for renovated houses in my neighborhood, I think this is the most common choice. See for example this house, with this floorplan:
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3. If the turned staircase is kept, sometimes it is placed in front of the staircase. Not ideal because it makes the front room, whether used as a living or dining room even smaller than it already is. Plus, for the reasons mentioned above, I don't want to keep the turned staircase. I can't immediately find an example of this.
4. Where the peninsula is. Not ideal because it creates a smaller opening into the kitchen (which is why everyone hates the peninsula) and takes a valuable window (who cares if there is a window in a powder room, plus who wants the neighbors looking in the powder room).
Do you have any other suggested placements?
I don't have any other suggestions. I think where you have it is the best you can do. We are struggling with this as well. Our designer suggested putting it in the back but I just don't know that I want to lose that back window. Do you have other examples of houses that put it in the back?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry if this has already been brought up, but do you worry about having the bathroom door right off the current living room? We use the middle room as the dining room, and the bathroom door is directly off of it. It's always been a sore point. I'm just wondering if you ever worried about maybe one day flipping the rooms and then being stuck with a bathroom door right off the dining room.
Yes, it is not ideal. However, in my opinion there is no ideal spot on the first floor of a rowhouse for the bathroom. The floor space is simply restrictive.
I've seen them:
1. all the way at the back of the house (sort of behind the kitchen) which blocks the flow of the light from the rear of the house. Like this house. The bathroom is behind the tiled wall.
![]()
2. Underneath the stairs (in the dining or living room), like mine is. Not ideal because you have to exit right into the room. In perusing a ton of listings for renovated houses in my neighborhood, I think this is the most common choice. See for example this house, with this floorplan:
![]()
3. If the turned staircase is kept, sometimes it is placed in front of the staircase. Not ideal because it makes the front room, whether used as a living or dining room even smaller than it already is. Plus, for the reasons mentioned above, I don't want to keep the turned staircase. I can't immediately find an example of this.
4. Where the peninsula is. Not ideal because it creates a smaller opening into the kitchen (which is why everyone hates the peninsula) and takes a valuable window (who cares if there is a window in a powder room, plus who wants the neighbors looking in the powder room).
Do you have any other suggested placements?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Add a cased opening between living room and dining room and kitchen. It will still feel open but won't feel like a bowling alley. It will also be easier to decorate/paint/hang art.
Thanks! Do you mean where the stairs currently are? The stairs currently divide the dining/living. Then then again where the peninsula is? That seems to be a smaller opening already which has been why people don't seem to favor having the peninsula.
Anonymous wrote:Add a cased opening between living room and dining room and kitchen. It will still feel open but won't feel like a bowling alley. It will also be easier to decorate/paint/hang art.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry if this has already been brought up, but do you worry about having the bathroom door right off the current living room? We use the middle room as the dining room, and the bathroom door is directly off of it. It's always been a sore point. I'm just wondering if you ever worried about maybe one day flipping the rooms and then being stuck with a bathroom door right off the dining room.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you tearing out the original staircase? it's beautiful and adds a ton of character to the house...
Anonymous wrote:This is an interesting discussion. We are currently toying with a kitchen renovation in our rowhouse and have similar questions about where to put the bathroom and also whether to do island/peninsula/or galley kitchen. Our designer wants us to do an island, but we have a small one already in our current narrow kitchen and I HATE it. I'm really leaning toward doing a galley, even though it's not best for entertaining.
One thing we did a few years ago is move the TV to the basement and so now we no longer have one on the first floor. It was one of the best things we've done for the house. We now have a sitting area that gets used plenty to listen to the radio/records/etc and for reading and for game playing (we have small kids). We do watch less tv overall but we're good with that.
Anonymous wrote:Hi, we are currently in the process of having our rowhouse completely renovated and adding an addition. It is interesting to look at your floor plans and inspiration pictures, too. We had a lot of the same considerations.
We toyed with the idea of putting the kitchen in the middle of the house, but ultimately decided not to. We do plan to having our living in the front and dining in the middle, but we can easily swap it out if we need the space. One of the reasons we did not put the kitchen in the middle is because it just isn't seen much and we felt that it might be a layout that people were not fans of, in general. Also, as you point out, light is a huge consideration and we were concerned the kitchen would just be too dark.
I love the idea of having your powder room opposite from the stairs, but I see you quickly abandoned that and I imagine it is, again, due to ensuring as much light as possible flows through the house. We struggled greatly with where to put our powder room for the same reasons and ended up putting it roughly in the same place since the stairs already block out light and we did not want to block out any more.
We are also essentially putting windows on the entire back side of our house to try to get in as much light as possible.
Sorry I don't have much in addition to offer - as I said, your plans look very similar to ours so it would seem we came to many of the same conclusions as we worked through the process. We did decide not to include a tub in our master bath. We decided that as far as personal use goes, my husband and I don't really take baths. This allowed the bathroom to be a bit smaller and we put more space into closets. But I think this is more of a personal preference than anything else. We do have a tub in the hall/guest bath.
I do agree with a previous poster about getting rid of the peninsula and going for the wider opening into the kitchen. This is another personal preference thing, but I'm not sure how much you will use that peninsula. I think it would end up just collecting stuff?
Another note, is it at all possible to get at least a half bath in that den on the top floor. I just imaging it could be a pain if you are up there and need to go to the bathroom and have to troop downstairs. We actually have our master bath on a separate floor from the other bedrooms. The floor our master bath is on has a den/tv room and we put another half bath there because we do not want people using the master bath when in the tv room, but we also did not want people to have to go downstairs. Just a thought.
Good luck with your project!