.....

RE Library Home

Search Library

Add This Library
To Your Web Site

Real Estate Forum

Advertise With Us

Submit Your Articles
To This Library

Library Site Map

Remodelers Assess What's Hot and What's Not - 2/23/2004 - Home Remodeling Interior Decorating Design

Remodelers Assess What's Hot and What's Not

In assessing what’s hot and what’s not in 2004, panelists at last month’s International Builders’ Show in Las Vegas identified several trends for the remodeling industry:

 

The Hot Spot for Entertaining

The kitchen has become the new entertainment hot spot for the house. Gone are the days of sipping tea in the formal living room, said Mary Jo Peterson of Mary Jo Peterson, Inc., in Brookfield, CT.

According to Peterson, home owners want bigger, brighter kitchens with wide entrances and sitting areas. Islands not only add more counter space, but can provide a center for chats with friends.

Dark cabinets have gone the way of avocado green appliances, according to Doug Sutton, CGR, CAPS, chairman of the Remodelors™ Council. Home owners want light-colored woods or even painted cabinetry, he said. Granite counter tops and tiling remain on the what’s in list.

 
 

Peterson noted that kitchens have been creeping away from the kitchen area, with home owners adding appliances such as dishwashers, stoves, refrigerators and wet bars to their bedrooms in an effort to create a “haven” from the outside world or to establish “care suites” following hospitalization or surgery. Manufacturers are responding to this trend by creating smaller, quieter dishwashers and other appliances that can blend into any room in the house.

Consumers who really want an “airy” kitchen are moving cooking to outdoor living spaces.

Pamper Yourself

While the kitchen is the place to entertain, the bathroom is the place to pamper yourself in pure luxury.

Peterson said home owners want to create the ultimate spa experience in their own home. The shower/bathtub combination is over. People now want huge, separate shower areas that can provide cascading “rain showers” and surrounding shower sprays.

And deeper soaking tubs are replacing Jacuzzis.

The perfect accent to spa tubs and showers is the vanity, which has become more ornate. Multiple sinks are in, and some even adjust to the height of the user.

The Everything Room

“Truly the ultimate luxury we can provide for a home is space,” said Denver-based architect Doug Walter, AIA, CGA, CAPS, of Doug Walter Architects. “When space is truly limited, we still see a preference among clients to define that space, especially in closets, studies and hobby rooms.”

Walter said he sees an increasing demand for a hobby or utility room. Whether it is a sewing room, theater, workshop, exercise room or garage you can live in, people are requesting new spaces that allow them to enhance and support their current lifestyle.

Vince Butler, CAPS, CGR of Butler Bros. Corp in Clifton, VA, said he has more requests for multipurpose rooms that are functional and for organized storage. “People are going for the ‘Costco look,’” says Butler. “They want everything to have its place and be easily accessible. Most of these rooms are used as summer kitchens, craft rooms, etc.”

Butler also reported a jump in the expansion of the utility/laundry room to include more counter space, bigger washers and dryers (even multiple dryers to keep up with the washer) and finishes that one would expect to find in the kitchen.

Stay as Long as You Like

While not something that occurs to too many young people, aging-in-place features that blend well into the design of the house are gaining favor. Big chrome grab bars have been replaced with ornate handles that serve the same purpose. Vanities and counter tops are adjustable, allowing consumers to sit while performing tasks that traditionally have been done standing up.

Universal design options are geared to appealing to everyone. Wider door frames make moving furniture a breeze for friends and movers; better daylighting and additional light fixtures help everyone’s “tired eyes”; and gentle, sloping stairways protect the knees of the young and the old.


Related Articles:
Virtual Reality Tours Can Translate Into Real Sales | Get Away Without Leaving Home: Create Tranquil Spaces
A ‘Tale of Two Cities’: Neoscape Makes a Second Home in Manhattan | Photos - Exterior - Specific House Styles
 

Article reprinted with permission Copyright ©. Article presentation format, categories, and content management system Copyright © Nemmar.com.

.....


Copyright © 1990-2007 All Rights Reserved - Terms and Conditions Our copyright is very strictly enforced!
Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape