NotUrsula
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 20,030
I've stayed in vacation condos that were open-plan that I thought were all right -- for a brief stay while I'm living out if a suitcase. Long-term in the workaday world? Ecch.
I need doors that I can close, particularly on a kitchen, to both isolate cooking heat from the rest of the house, & to contain clutter. I need walls to put pictures & shelves on, and to park furniture against, and to keep my teen on the other side of when she's being a pill.
Recently I saw a house not far from me that had been gut- rehabbed. Someone had turned a perfectly good 1920s foursquare house into this modernist open-plan monstrosity that has huge beams crossing all the ceilings, presumably in lieu of load-bearing walls. Doing this is a minor trend around here, and I really want it to stop.
(Foursquares in particular are nearly perfect as they are; if you need more space then just bump out the back wall!)
Sometimes I tell myself that it isn't so bad when the place was built to be open-plan, but then I recall the 80s, where nearly every wall stopped short of the ceiling, and there are almost never any 90-degree angles anywhere. Gives me nightmares.
I need doors that I can close, particularly on a kitchen, to both isolate cooking heat from the rest of the house, & to contain clutter. I need walls to put pictures & shelves on, and to park furniture against, and to keep my teen on the other side of when she's being a pill.
Recently I saw a house not far from me that had been gut- rehabbed. Someone had turned a perfectly good 1920s foursquare house into this modernist open-plan monstrosity that has huge beams crossing all the ceilings, presumably in lieu of load-bearing walls. Doing this is a minor trend around here, and I really want it to stop.
(Foursquares in particular are nearly perfect as they are; if you need more space then just bump out the back wall!)
Sometimes I tell myself that it isn't so bad when the place was built to be open-plan, but then I recall the 80s, where nearly every wall stopped short of the ceiling, and there are almost never any 90-degree angles anywhere. Gives me nightmares.