Open plan living area alcoves
Niamh
5 years ago
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Comments (8)
Niamh
5 years agoNiamh
5 years agoRelated Discussions
How to tie open-plan kitchen/ living/ dining room areas together?
Comments (13)I agree with many of the suggestions above, especially that there's too much furniture in the living room. You're going to hate me for saying this but I think there's too much clutter and busyness overall for such a small space. I'd radically reduce the number of pictures and knick-knacks in both rooms – especially the living room – and move the ones you keep to less prominent places. I'd also take the coat rack and cookery bookshelves out completely, and replace the busy parquet flooring with either not-busy plank laminate or a simple-patterned or solid rug. Finally, I like trees but that spidery palm tree is hideous IMO....See Moreadvice on open plan kitchen/dinner and small living area layout
Comments (0)Hi, I’ve just bought a house which requires full refurbishment. I’m looking to open up Kitchen/Breakfast room and dinner area to create a large open plan. However I’m confused on what’s the best layout so I can maximum unit, dinning area and a small living/sofa area? The window in the kitchen can be moved....See MoreOpen plan kitchen and living area
Comments (6)pretty much any wood colour will go with white tiles! I would avoid plain white/cream tiles in your kitchen though, they will be a real pain to keep clean especially if you have pale grout too. We have porcelain wood tiles in our open plan room, engineered wood chevrons in our living room, glass doors between. Honestly the two don’t “match” but I don’t mind, each is the best floor for its space which is more important. The doors aren’t often open anyway....See MorePARTLY OPEN-PLAN KITCHEN/LIVING AREA FLOORING HELP!!!
Comments (2)Hi Eliza, maybe turn off caps lock next time you post 😂 What you’re describing is pretty much exactly what we’re planning with our new extension which will step down from the living room. We’re going for porcelain tiles in the kitchen/dining new extension (industry from mandarin stone with underfloor heating) and wood in the existing living room. I think it will work well to zone the areas, and works because of the step change. I really don’t like floor changes on the same level, but the step makes it ok in my logic 😀 if you want porcelain on the step itself you’ll need to think about how it’s edged. I think we’re going to continue the wood on the step as it solves the edging issue....See MoreUser
5 years agoNiamh
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