Anonymous wrote:Keep some walls to hang coats, paintings, and very importantly to block and absorb noise.
Contractors are not normally good designers.
Anonymous wrote:My neighbors renovated their homes and put huge wall windows. So now you don’t only see the kitchen as you enter the front door, you see the full thing from the street. Though I never see them use the kitchen, so it’s in an ideal condition - design magazine pristine.
Like you, I like having nook or entry that separates the entrance from the rest of the space. So I’d also find it weird just entering into a huge open floor.
Anonymous wrote:Idk, does anyone follow the design blog Chris Loves Julia? They are designing their new house to have the kitchen in front, off the foyer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Removing a kitchen wall might look good on TV but it doesn't live well. If you remove walls you are very limited with your furniture placement. Plus walls are ideal for privacy, sound control, etc. Don't fall for this fad.
This makes no sense. If you think furniture placement is a function of putting things against walls then you don't know anything about design.
...or you don't. I can't count the flipped homes I've seen that have no flexibility for furniture placement because they removed interior walls. While I'm sure you're fine with mounting your TV above your fireplace, most people want more options. Not everyone has an upright piano like I do, but many people have credenzas, buffets, hall trees, etc. that don't just float in the middle of the goddam combination kitchen/dining/living room. If you want to learn more about interior design and why partition walls are functional, Laurel Bern has an excellent blog that will explain this to you.
No, I don't need to know anything from incompetent designers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Removing a kitchen wall might look good on TV but it doesn't live well. If you remove walls you are very limited with your furniture placement. Plus walls are ideal for privacy, sound control, etc. Don't fall for this fad.
This makes no sense. If you think furniture placement is a function of putting things against walls then you don't know anything about design.
...or you don't. I can't count the flipped homes I've seen that have no flexibility for furniture placement because they removed interior walls. While I'm sure you're fine with mounting your TV above your fireplace, most people want more options. Not everyone has an upright piano like I do, but many people have credenzas, buffets, hall trees, etc. that don't just float in the middle of the goddam combination kitchen/dining/living room. If you want to learn more about interior design and why partition walls are functional, Laurel Bern has an excellent blog that will explain this to you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah a “private” kitchen makes me think of my grandmother who slaved away in one all day for holiday meals while the rest of us hung out or came and went and then after dinner the women would go in and help her with the dishes and the men would adjourn to the living room.
Ugh.
There is a big difference between a "private" kitchen (which sounds nice to me because I'm an introvert) and a kitchen that isn't visible from your front door. But the current trend in new builds is to have two kitchens: a big showpiece kitchen for entertaining, and a private one for actual cooking. Because people have realized that a kitchen doesn't look like a magazine when you actually use it, and maybe our ancestors weren't so stupid after all.
This is so stupid and wasteful.
The people doing this have $$$$. But what's more stupid and wasteful is tearing down walls in your 2000 SF house, making your home less functional because you saw it in a magazine.
How does tearing down a wall make a house less functional? Seriously. Explain. And remember, I want to hear what functions the wall is responsible for.
Privacy, sound mitigation, smell mitigation.