Narrow Entryway Design Help!
Valerie Cost
2 months ago
Featured Answer
Sort by:Oldest
Comments (14)
Valerie Cost
2 months agoRelated Discussions
Help find GOOD quality, narrow console or entry table
Comments (2)What's your budget? The Stickley sofa table and console table are close to fitting the bill. http://www.stickley.com/OurProducts_Details.cfm?id=1842&Collection=Mis sion&cat1=88&view=single&finish= http://www.stickley.com/OurProducts_Details.cfm?id=1843&Collection=Mis sion&finish= Here is a link that might be useful: Stickley This post was edited by palimpsest on Fri, Apr 12, 13 at 12:32...See MoreDesign Help Wanted: Long, narrow kitchen
Comments (21)Thanks for the ideas and questions. Sorry it has taken me so long to respond. I’m reworking my plan and really trying to take Marcolo’s ice-water-stone-fire into consideration while doing it. I’m probably not going to be able to do much more work on this until after Thanksgiving. I will probably start a new discussion with my new layout sometime after the holiday. I’ll post a link here when I do so, hopefully, you all will pop into the new discussion and give me more of your great insights. Individual responses to you all, below. I fear my responses sound argumentative but I don’t mean them that way. I just don’t understand where you are coming from and possibly need more clarification to help me see what I’m missing. Thanks again: hollysprings said: It's confusing as to what area is ''kitchen''. Is it the laundry area? If so then more than half of your appliances arent actually in the kitchen. Is it the area at the top right? Same thing. You've got stuff that you need that isn't where you need it. Either way, I don't think that takng down the wall is doing you any favors if it leaves the whole house so ill defined. @hollysprings: Right now the laundry room is just a big catch-all room which also tends to collect clutter (which drives me batty) and traffic route. If I had a use for the extra space in the laundry area, it would make sense to keep it but I don’t. I don’t sew or do any crafts that would require me sitting in a separate room to do. At 8X16 it's really just a big, wide hallway that is almost as big as my cramped 15.5x10.5 kitchen (see photo in one of my posts above). So it makes more sense to me to eliminate the big hall and put that space in the kitchen where I need more of it. Or do you mean the wall we’re taking down in the picture above, between kitchen and dining room? I don’t understand why that’s not a good thing. The kitchen is too small to expand or make many changes to the current layout, feels cramped, and the dining room is too small to be very useful either. It seems that I then just have two rooms that both function poorly. What am I missing? ---- aloha2009 said: Have you considered removing the entry wall also, since semi-imposing on access to the front door would happen only when you are seating a full 12 people (3-4x/year), I think that would open up some options for you. It would really open up the entryway, unless you are against that. I'm not sure why you are against having your stove be a focal point. Many, many,kitchens make the stove/vent the focal point which looks great! My current kitchen the frig is the focal point. I've yet to find one kitchen pic with that. I understand your love of your windows. I personally am going to add 8-12' of new windows in our kitchen into our medium sized kitchen. With or w/o the new windows I have a functioning kitchen. There's give and take in any kitchen remodel. @aloha2009: I’m not fond of removing the entry wall. I really dislike front doors that just open into the house itself without some kind of separation from living and entry areas. I’d also like to avoid that because I really like the original wood used on the entry side of that wall. It would make me sad to see it go. The prior owners already removed too much of it as it is, imho. I could make the stove/hood the focal point or I could have nice, lighted cabinets in that same location that show off some of my fun collection of serving pieces, pitchers, and my colorful “in-between” dishes. If I have a choice, I’d rather have the latter. I’m not big on appliances as focal points in general. I was really striving for more of an “un-kitchen” look, as much as practical while still having a functional layout. ---- laughable said: It will be really helpful to see your plan on graph paper. It would also be helpful if you labeled your graph paper with letters and arrows in reference to the photos taken. Label your photos: A, B, C, etc. Then label the drawings where the pictures were taken with an arrow showing the direction you were looking when you shot the picture. Like this: A---->, B---->, C----> to help us get a better feel for things. : ) I've popped on and off a few times trying to see where your thread might go and to see if I could offer any help. The one thing that comes to mind is to ask if you can put the washer and dryer anywhere else since it seems to be eating a major portion of your kitchen. Can it go where your coat closet is, or in a bathroom, or in a part of a bedroom, or in the basement (and install a laundry chute)? Anywhere but in the kitchen, LOL. We'll be able to help you more with the graph paper version, surely. @ laughable: After T-Day, I’ll work up something like you suggest with photos and such. Thanks for that suggestion. I’m surprised that the laundry area is bothering people so much. I just don’t see it as an issue. I have no place else on this floor to move it. If we put it in the coat closet, we’d have no place for coats and I see no good place to build a new closet. The bathroom isn’t big enough. I LOVE having it there as it’s close to the bedrooms, close to the kitchen where I spend a fair amount of time, so I never have any laundry piling up. If I moved it in the basement, it would be inconvenient and I know I’d keep forgetting to move the laundry along. Plus, it would mess up the Man Cave. Except for more pantry storage, which I don’t really need, I don’t see what else I would even use that space for. I mean, I guess some of the stuff I do now have in a cabinet in the basement could come up to a pantry area there but this is stuff I seldom use or things like the huge package of Costco paper towels which, because I don’t use them much, takes me about two years to go through. I’m just not convinced that the convenience of having seldom used items closer to kitchen outweighs the huge inconvenience of hauling laundry up/down stairs. Plus, I am in my late 50’s and we hope to age-out here. Carrying the laundry up/down may not be as easy when I’m 80 as it is now. Or maybe doing that will help keep me young, lol. If it helps, we are planning on putting a counter over w/d and then adding some louvered, bi-fold doors to cover the front. Does covering them up help make you more comfortable with placement?...See MoreLong narrow entryway- need help!
Comments (2)Could we have a few more pictures? facing the other direction and into little hall, etc.. what does your light look like? Is it the picture or could this space use more light? I think the bench, while nice, is a bit large in scale for the space. Will people be sitting here and taking off shoes? If so remove the pillows and offer a place to put shoes nearby. An entry way without a table is just a passing through space to where you can set your things down. A table with a bench or stools might be more functional for you depending on the type of set up you have. It is always nice to have a last minute check mirror over the table and a place to put keys, bags, etc......See MoreNarrow entryway-help needed!
Comments (4)I agree with Olychick smaller bench closer to stairs without interfering with stairs and a nice runner - here is a link with something smaller with storage - just an idea. https://www.overstock.com/Home-Garden/Benches/2740/subcat.html?featuredproduct=10596618&featuredoption=16311791&kid=9553000357392&track=pspla&ci_src=17588969&ci_sku=17669821-000-000&cnc=US&cid=248961&type=pla&targetid=pla-409665378466&ds_rl=1263867&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIyuisreKn4AIVCoTICh2WGgL3EAkYFCABEgJlK_D_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds...See Morejackowskib
2 months agoMaureen
2 months agolast modified: 2 months agojlouise54
2 months agochispa
2 months agoValerie Cost
2 months agochloebud
2 months agochispa
2 months agoacm
2 months agoPatricia Colwell Consulting
2 months agolast modified: 2 months agoValerie Cost
2 months agoDenise Marchand
2 months agolast modified: 2 months agoValerie Cost
2 months ago
Related Stories
MORE ROOMSDesign Dilemma: Decorating Around an Open Entryway
How Would You Design This Narrow Space?
Full StoryLATEST NEWS FOR PROFESSIONALS‘Help Clients Narrow Down Choices’ and Other Advice From Pros
Home design and building professionals share tips they learned from recently completed projects
Full StoryENTRYWAYSHome Setups That Serve You: Designing the Entryway
Get an entry that works for your particular habits, needs and style with this interior designer's wisdom
Full StoryBATHROOM DESIGNKey Measurements to Help You Design a Powder Room
Clearances, codes and coordination are critical in small spaces such as a powder room. Here’s what you should know
Full StoryARCHITECTUREDesign Workshop: Reasons to Love Narrow Homes
Get the skinny on how a superslim house footprint can work wonderfully for your site, budget and quality of life
Full StoryKITCHEN DESIGNKey Measurements to Help You Design Your Kitchen
Get the ideal kitchen setup by understanding spatial relationships, building dimensions and work zones
Full StorySMALL HOMESHouzz Tour: Thoughtful Design Works Its Magic in a Narrow London Home
Determination and small-space design maneuvers create a bright three-story home in London
Full StoryLANDSCAPE DESIGN12 Design Moves to Make Your Narrow Lot Look Wider
Give your slender property a more expansive feel by adding curves, layering plantings, building in storage and more
Full StoryHOUZZ TV LIVE3 Design Tricks to Make a Narrow Bathroom Look Larger
An editor shows how designers play with tile and color in bathrooms that have a shower-tub combo
Full StoryURBAN GARDENSLessons in Small-Garden Design From 11 English Entryways
Unsure how to turn your tiny front yard into something special? Check out these inspirational ways to make an entrance
Full Story
HALLETT & Co.