By
Lisa Jensen.
What makes you feel most welcome when you're
an overnight guest? I like being shown to a cozy, tucked-away
room with a bed dressed up in catalog linens and a down duvet,
adjoining a full bath stocked with fluffy towels and wrapped
soaps.
Of course, before we built our new home,
I showed my guests how to yank open the 10-year-old family
room sleeper sofa, which usually spit out shriveled snacks
from the last slumber party, a balled sock and a plastic
limb or two from a Polly Pocket™.
When we built new, creating a comfortable
guest room was foremost on my agenda. We merged our street-facing,
main-floor, 13 x 14 square-foot den into a home office, library
and guest room. Built-in shelves surrounding the large double
window are filled with magazines, biographies, children's
books and photos. Next to a new top-notch sleeper sofa (mattress
tested to ensure comfort!), we placed a trunk-turned-coffee
table that stores pillows and bedding. My desk and computer
sit on the opposite wall, next to a great reading chair.
The room can be closed off with French doors.
I'm pretty thrilled with this space - and
so is my family. Everyone loves to read, study, work or watch
a small T.V. here. Guests have found it cozy, private and
convenient to our half bath.
"This type of flexibility is one of
our primary focuses in our current designs," comments
Rob Phillips, home plan designer for Design Basics. "Most
of our new designs incorporate a flex room that can be used
as a den, an office, a homeschool room or a craft room, on
an everyday basis and also occasionally be used as a guest
room."
 |
This
attractive cherry wall unit features lighted bookcases
and hidden storage.
When the bed is down, the cabinetry provides a cozy surround. |
 |
This
Select Comfort sofa bed has an 11-inch thick mattress,
dual adjustable air chambers to control firmness
on either side, and a tri-fold support system to eliminate the
notorious "bar." |
Making
Space A Place - Or Two
One of today's hottest new homebuilding
trends, the "flex" room appeals to homebuyers who
want to make the most of every square foot. Whether it's
in a bonus room, loft, den, top floor of a Cape Cod, or finished
lower level - whether it becomes a home theater, music room,
home office or place to meditate - this personalized space
can be designed to lessen the chaos of daily life and accommodate
your changing lifestyle.
The Plus?
Innovative and packed with surprises, today's
flex room can offer perks that yesterday's overnight guests
- as well as homeowners - never dreamed of.
Want to hide a home office that looks "all
business?" Consider investing in multi-purpose furniture.
The Closet Re-Organizer Company in Toronto (www.ClosetOrganizer.ca)
offers a revolutionary custom cabinetry system that can incorporate
a table, desk, shelving, storage drawers and wardrobe space
- in every decor style.
The highlight of this system is an orthopedic,
latex mattress that rolls out of the rear of the cabinet
or shelf unit base with the touch of a button - then disappears
just as swiftly when it's not needed. The multi-functional
system can also house high-tech media equipment or transform
into a dining room.
Based in San Francisco, design-and-build
firm Modern Spaces (www.ModernSpaces.com)
is the U.S. distributor for ip20, a European manufacturer
of high-end, space-saving modular wall components that can
define a work space, provide ample storage, and include a
contemporary wall bed system.
 |
By
day, a well organized office. By night,
an efficient guest room. |
You can easily cozy up a home office that's
used primarily for paperwork and personal projects. A trunk
that holds files can double as a coffee table. A computer
can be rolled out on a cart, hidden in an armoire or closed
into a ready-to-assemble closet organizing system. A sleeper
sofa can be paired with a cushioned window seat that flips
up to reveal linens, pillows and storage space for guests.
Phillips comments on the importance of lighting
in a guest room that doubles as a work space. "High,
transom-type windows or corner windows retain maximum wall
space for furniture placement, while reducing the chance
for glare on computer screens. A combination of general and
task lighting is needed, and drama can be added with lighting
accenting special ceiling details, a bookcase or a window
seat. Incorporating a dimmer switch can create a soothing,
evening atmosphere for guests. I also suggest including multiple
access locations for data/communication wiring to allow for
more than one furniture arrangement."
" If it's a home office that needs
access for clients coming to it from the front door, locate
it near the foyer or side entry of the home, so they won't
have to travel through other parts of your home to get to
it," advises Jennifer Pippin, a residential design specialist
from Cornelius, North Carolina.

Details
Make the Difference
Not So Big House author and architect Susan
Susanka promotes alcoves, which offer an "alternative
space within a larger space." A sleeper sofa can be
nestled beneath the eaves of a low roofline in an alcove.
Or, consider adding an alcove in your flex room with a built-in
desk that can support your laptop and a T.V. for guests.
Add a small table with a chair or two for game playing, bill
paying or conversation over coffee.
If the budget allows, barrel vault the ceiling
in your flex space for interest and a tucked-in feel. Such
a nook will offer family members and visitors a special refuge.

Looks can be deceiving. This "bookcase" is actually a
cabinet with a drop-down desk and bed. |
Whether you're outfitting a home office
or an "away" room - Susanka's coin phrase for a
more secluded quiet space - shelving on either side of a
window seat and drawers below it provide practical and eye-appealing
use of each square foot. Cantilever the seat out further
to accommodate a twin-sized sleeping niche with a built-in
mattress. Add over-sized throw pillows to create a cozy study
spot or reading nook.
Got books? Beyond building in a wall of
shelves, you might also drop a shelf a foot or so down from
the ceiling and encircle the room's perimeter. If your ceiling
height is taller and space allows, add a rolling ladder for
easy book access. Ensure plenty of natural light by adding
transoms above shelves.
For guests, look for over-sized reading
chairs that transform into twin sleepers; add two in your
library, or combine one with your window seat retreat.
A home office, library or frequently used
hobby room can share a two-sided fireplace with your family
room - a perk your guests will love during brisk autumn visits
or the Christmas holidays.
In a media room, Grand Rapids, Michigan
architect Eric Hughes notes that a wall-mounted plasma T.V.
screen can "hide" behind one of VisionArt's fine
art prints. When the T.V. is turned on, the specialty ink-sprayed
canvas subtly rolls up into a customized hardwood frame.
With a touch of a button at the show's end, the canvas elegantly
drops back down to conceal the screen.
"It's great ambience for guests, and
for homeowners as well," Hughes says. "It's especially
nice over a fireplace."
If you homeschool, you can connect your
T.V. to the Internet. "Kids love surfing the Internet
on a giant T.V., and parents love a bigger display screen
for teaching," Hughes comments. When parents are done
browsing websites with kids and lessons for the day are done,
homework and learning supplies can be tucked out of sight
in built-in drawers.
This unit's lift mechanism (the SICO Room Maker™) uses a compression
coil to offset the heavy weight of a real, king-size mattress and box
spring.
A futon, a Murphy bed or another bed wall unit from specialty furniture
makers like The Closet Re-Organizer Company or Modern Spaces, can keep
floor space open when you're using your flex room for schooling, sewing
or scrap-booking.
 |
| This
unit's lift mechanism (the SICO Room Maker™)
uses a compression coil to offset the heavy weight
of a real, king-size mattress and box spring. |
Still More
Alternatives
Gopal Ahluwalia, vice president for research
for the National Association of Home Builders, says the most
popular spot for guest rooms and flexible extra living space
is the bonus area over a three-car garage.
"It's a great multi-purpose space," he
comments. "You can make it a playroom, a home office,
or a media room - it can change as your family grows. Teens
especially like to hang out in this area. And when you add
a full bath, it makes a great guest room for the college
student home on weekends, or a mother-in-law suite." (You
can search for plans with finished rooms over the garage
by visiting HerHome.com/home-plans and checking "F.R.O.G.")
High-tech media components including surround
sound, computer stations and wall-mounted plasma screens
can be added to this trendy bonus space.
Such a room is a far cry from the sleeping
porch. Depending on where you live, this might be yet another
option to consider - particularly if you love the sounds
of crickets and wind chimes, looking at stars and enjoying
a light night breeze.
Historically, a screened porch located on
the second floor above a ground-level veranda, the sleeping
porch was a common place to keep cool in the twentieth century.
Today, including a sleeping porch in your
blueprint just might lend a little magic for guests staying
overnight during summer months or in a climate which is warm
year-round - and become the perfect place for you to rejuvenate,
too.
No matter which kind of space you create,
be careful. If it's planned out too well, guests won't want
to leave.
Related Topics

|