Open-plan living is the perfect way to bind a kitchen, typically at the back of the house, with other rooms and the garden to create one large multi-functional and light-filled space. In recent years, open-plan living has become a popular option when redesigning and configuring a new kitchen design. It boasts a great number of advantages, including adding value to your home.

Research conducted by the National Association of Estate Agents revealed that opening up space, and kitchen makeovers are within the top four home improvements that will add value to a property. In last year’s UK Houzz Report, which is based on survey results from the Houzz community, 54% of homeowners were making their kitchens more open to other rooms, with 35% knocking down walls and opening up space completely. Moreover, in a recent Houzz poll, which asked, “Yay or Nay to Open-plan Kitchens?”, the result was overwhelmingly in favour of the idea, with 840 votings “yay” to 230 voting “nay”.

The popularity of open-plan living has flourished thanks to the opportunities it creates for a more sociable space to make family memories, host parties and make dinner. But what happens when the party ends? Is open-plan living all it’s cracked up to be? Harvey Jones, a contemporary kitchens specialist, investigates.

open-plan living

A social space?

Open-plan living provides homeowners with a social space – an area that can be used for more than just preparing and cooking daily meals. Knocking down walls to combine kitchen and dining spaces helps inject more light into your home. This open-plan space quickly becomes the focal point in the home, creating a fluid space that binds rooms together. If you are a host or an entertainer, an open-plan kitchen is a dream – providing a space that you can use to socialise with guests whilst cooking as opposed to feeling isolated when cooking in one room whilst trying to juggle hosting skills and whipping up dishes.

With an open space, whilst it obviously looks visually bigger, there are design methods that allow you to identify different zones, whilst remaining open. From zone lighting to kitchen islands, breakfast bars and dining booths, just because you design an open space, doesn’t necessarily mean you can’t identify sections of the room to maintain a structure. Bi-folding doors help to enhance the natural light even more, whilst bringing the nature of the garden into the room.

There are practical advantages too – open-plan spaces provide plenty of space for the whole family to enjoy meaning parents can keep an eye on children playing whilst they stay busy in the kitchen. Open-plan takes away the need for parents to be in ‘two places at once’.

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A chaotic space?

Does having everything in one place, with the whole family together, and several tasks going on at once sound like chaos? You wouldn’t be necessarily wrong. Whilst open-plan living has many advantages including a social space for hosting, partying, cooking and eating some owners find the cons outweigh the pros. VIP Realty says roaming smells and odours from cooking circulating around more than just your kitchen space can be a direct result of open-plan kitchen spaces. If your kitchen is merged with your living space, do you want to be sitting on the sofa watching TV with the lingering smell of the fish cakes you had for tea?

And, it is easy for these spaces to become chaotic and untidy. For a successful open-plan space, you’ll need to find appropriate storage solutions to store all your kitchen utensils, children’s toys, magazines and books and more. Do you want to spend the evening being reminded of the dishes that you didn’t wash after your evening meal? A separate utility space, however, eliminates this problem, and provides a space to hide all your washing and dirty dishes, and provides a door between you and any noisy appliances that could disturb you when eating, relaxing or watching TV.

Open-plan living is a personal preference for many modern homeowners, but not everyone. Whilst it is proven to be one of the most popular kitchen refurb projects, it’s a style of living not suited to every homeowner. What would you choose?

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