9 Trends That Could Change How We Live at Home
The pandemic has spurred a desire for more privacy, creative areas, multigenerational spaces and contact with nature
Some clear and possibly lasting trends have emerged from the pandemic, following shifts in the way we live at home. The biggest change concerns open-plan layouts: After years of love for openness and fluidity between spaces, we now are seeking separate areas that ensure privacy and serve a distinct function. Other trends are a need for a buffer zone at the entrance to the home, spacious storage solutions to free the home from clutter, a move toward multigenerational living and an interest in multifunctional furniture.
Therefore, turning the house into a living space that is used more frequently and intensely has led to a new awareness of needs that may have been less pressing before the pandemic.
Find a design-build firm on Houzz
Find a design-build firm on Houzz
In Search of Boundaries
The first major change is the declining popularity of open-plan living areas. “The floor plan has finally freed itself from the yoke of having to exist as an open space at all costs, which was, by the way, the result of a great misunderstanding related to how industrial spaces and workshops (e.g., cosmopolitan lofts) were converted into fluid residential spaces,” Campone says.
“But our lifestyle now requires spatial organization, separations and connections. A more calculated layout is therefore necessary and is being enhanced by two types of furniture: custom pieces that maximize the use of horizontal and vertical space, and, in contrast, other pieces that are mostly eye candy and carry emotional or iconic weight.”
Monica Khemsurov, co-founder of Sight Unseen magazine and a speaker at Home Dynamics, an event organized by the furniture Vitra company to investigate new ways of living, agrees. “For years, [many people] have been almost fanatically obsessed with open-plan living.” Now, she notes, the idea of living all your life in a single room with no privacy seems much less appealing.
15 Ways to Create Separation in an Open Floor Plan
The first major change is the declining popularity of open-plan living areas. “The floor plan has finally freed itself from the yoke of having to exist as an open space at all costs, which was, by the way, the result of a great misunderstanding related to how industrial spaces and workshops (e.g., cosmopolitan lofts) were converted into fluid residential spaces,” Campone says.
“But our lifestyle now requires spatial organization, separations and connections. A more calculated layout is therefore necessary and is being enhanced by two types of furniture: custom pieces that maximize the use of horizontal and vertical space, and, in contrast, other pieces that are mostly eye candy and carry emotional or iconic weight.”
Monica Khemsurov, co-founder of Sight Unseen magazine and a speaker at Home Dynamics, an event organized by the furniture Vitra company to investigate new ways of living, agrees. “For years, [many people] have been almost fanatically obsessed with open-plan living.” Now, she notes, the idea of living all your life in a single room with no privacy seems much less appealing.
15 Ways to Create Separation in an Open Floor Plan
After months of kitchens doubling as a place to work and do homework, and living rooms being continuously piled up with work files, books, toys and computer hardware — making it very difficult to relax and truly get away from work — we are now trying to divide spaces whenever possible. If the home office has its own room, closing its door at the end of the day can help us unplug.
“Our kitchens have become offices, and we often don’t even bother to put away our laptops while eating because we’ll be right back to work soon enough,” says Esther Perel, a psychotherapist who participated in Home Dynamics. “We have experienced a total collapse of boundaries while adapting to a completely new lifestyle, and this has had a serious impact on our mental health.”
“Our kitchens have become offices, and we often don’t even bother to put away our laptops while eating because we’ll be right back to work soon enough,” says Esther Perel, a psychotherapist who participated in Home Dynamics. “We have experienced a total collapse of boundaries while adapting to a completely new lifestyle, and this has had a serious impact on our mental health.”
A Need for Organization
The stress caused by an open-plan layout crowded with desks and workspaces has also led to another trend: an increase in the need for storage spaces where we can quickly put away (or hide) the things that have been left lying around, so we can relax in a tidy space.
Shop for storage solutions on Houzz
The stress caused by an open-plan layout crowded with desks and workspaces has also led to another trend: an increase in the need for storage spaces where we can quickly put away (or hide) the things that have been left lying around, so we can relax in a tidy space.
Shop for storage solutions on Houzz
Buffer Zone at the Entrance
Today, designers are also increasingly being asked to make a buffer zone at the entrance with two main objectives: for the sake of hygiene, in order to have a space to leave outdoor, shoes, bags and coats; and to separate the living space from where deliveries are received.
Today, designers are also increasingly being asked to make a buffer zone at the entrance with two main objectives: for the sake of hygiene, in order to have a space to leave outdoor, shoes, bags and coats; and to separate the living space from where deliveries are received.
The Home Workshop
Especially during the first months of the lockdown, more and more online activities and workshops popped up — aimed especially at engaging children with new forms of entertainment — while adults have had more fun in the kitchen by doing more cooking.
“A very interesting trend is that of the house-workshop. Our homes are often missing spaces for ‘making’ — like work tables or rooms dedicated to musical, artistic and cultural creativity,” Campone says. “We have a need for reading spots, music corners and DIY tables. Thanks to the pandemic, we have understood how useful and stimulating a certain amount of domestic self-sufficiency can be.”
Especially during the first months of the lockdown, more and more online activities and workshops popped up — aimed especially at engaging children with new forms of entertainment — while adults have had more fun in the kitchen by doing more cooking.
“A very interesting trend is that of the house-workshop. Our homes are often missing spaces for ‘making’ — like work tables or rooms dedicated to musical, artistic and cultural creativity,” Campone says. “We have a need for reading spots, music corners and DIY tables. Thanks to the pandemic, we have understood how useful and stimulating a certain amount of domestic self-sufficiency can be.”
Multigenerational Houses
Nora Fehlbaum, CEO of Vitra, highlights another trend linked to the new family structure and its effects on lifestyle: “With nursing homes becoming the epicenter of the health crisis and older people bearing increased risk for [COVID-19] and other diseases, families have brought their elders back into their homes. Thus, former empty nests are turning into multigenerational habitats, and the families seem to enjoy it.”
And, she says, “larger families require home adaptations: more dining chairs, larger sofas, more lounge chairs, and products that can generally sustain heavier use.”
In addition, young people, who are moving back in with their parents at much higher rates than in the last few decades, now sometimes share spaces with their grandparents as well.
Find an architect near you
Nora Fehlbaum, CEO of Vitra, highlights another trend linked to the new family structure and its effects on lifestyle: “With nursing homes becoming the epicenter of the health crisis and older people bearing increased risk for [COVID-19] and other diseases, families have brought their elders back into their homes. Thus, former empty nests are turning into multigenerational habitats, and the families seem to enjoy it.”
And, she says, “larger families require home adaptations: more dining chairs, larger sofas, more lounge chairs, and products that can generally sustain heavier use.”
In addition, young people, who are moving back in with their parents at much higher rates than in the last few decades, now sometimes share spaces with their grandparents as well.
Find an architect near you
Multifunctionality
In furnishings, multifunctionality is becoming increasingly popular. For years, office furnishings mimicked home furniture in terms of style and color. Now the reverse is happening: Acoustic panels and sliding partitions previously used only to separate workspaces in offices are coming into the home. Desks at home are increasingly resembling those from the office, including setups that can be adapted from sitting to standing for better posture.
The 5 Biggest Trends at 2020 Global Design Events
In furnishings, multifunctionality is becoming increasingly popular. For years, office furnishings mimicked home furniture in terms of style and color. Now the reverse is happening: Acoustic panels and sliding partitions previously used only to separate workspaces in offices are coming into the home. Desks at home are increasingly resembling those from the office, including setups that can be adapted from sitting to standing for better posture.
The 5 Biggest Trends at 2020 Global Design Events
A Check on Technology
The new word “technopherence” is popping up more. It refers to the interference of technology in personal relationships. “The pandemic accelerated, almost like a rocket, our use of digital communication for work, education, shopping and leisure,” says Kent Martinussen, CEO of the Danish Architecture Center. “Suddenly we were doing at home many of the things we would normally do elsewhere. Digitally and socially overwhelmed and isolated in a confined physical space, we quickly began to desire the experiences — and understand the value — of public spaces and contact with nature.”
The new word “technopherence” is popping up more. It refers to the interference of technology in personal relationships. “The pandemic accelerated, almost like a rocket, our use of digital communication for work, education, shopping and leisure,” says Kent Martinussen, CEO of the Danish Architecture Center. “Suddenly we were doing at home many of the things we would normally do elsewhere. Digitally and socially overwhelmed and isolated in a confined physical space, we quickly began to desire the experiences — and understand the value — of public spaces and contact with nature.”
In Touch With the Outdoors
Here is the trend that seems most evident to everyone: During lockdowns, the luckiest people are those who have access to an outdoor space, like a yard or a balcony, because it means having precious additional space and a chance to enjoy fresh air.
The Forest Effect and 9 Other Global Furniture Trends
Here is the trend that seems most evident to everyone: During lockdowns, the luckiest people are those who have access to an outdoor space, like a yard or a balcony, because it means having precious additional space and a chance to enjoy fresh air.
The Forest Effect and 9 Other Global Furniture Trends
Martinussen says, “I have recognized a strong general trend: a desire for nature! It has arisen for many reasons, one of which is the overwhelming digital presence we all feel totally embedded — and sometimes trapped — in. The sustainability agenda plays a role in promoting attention to nature, but in reality, we are defined and guided by a general human need and desire for balance between, on one hand, the often fuzzy and immaterial world of our digital life and, on the other hand, being rooted in a world of things that are not artificial: such as wood, bamboo, stones, plants, water and animals, which belong to a realm that we are part of and connected to — nature.”
Share: Are you making changes to your home in response to changing lifestyle needs? Share your experiences in the Comments.
More on Houzz
Read more stories
Browse home photos for ideas
Find pros
Shop for products
Share: Are you making changes to your home in response to changing lifestyle needs? Share your experiences in the Comments.
More on Houzz
Read more stories
Browse home photos for ideas
Find pros
Shop for products
The first part of this analysis starts with how we value our homes, which have transformed significantly over the past year.
“During the first phase of the pandemic, the house went back to its primitive function of shelter and refuge, and, once forced into isolation, we understood that the spaces we used to think of as just accommodation are actually an extension of our personalities and passions,” says Claudia Campone, founder of ThirtyOne Design and creator of PostHome, an experimental apartment that applies the concepts of new ways of living.
“Then, if you think about how visible our lives are on social media, the house has become the background scene of our daily actions. We were simply forced to — and therefore managed to — re-create in our homes everything we used to delegate to other spaces: work, sport, leisure and, for many of us, eating well.”
10 Ways to Make Your Home a Haven