Good space planning is almost invisible. You notice it through ease: doors open properly, people can move without turning sideways, and the furniture supports what happens in the room.
1. You constantly move around furniture
If daily movement requires repeated detours, the circulation path is being blocked. A better arrangement can often solve this without buying anything new.
2. The room has unused corners but still feels crowded
This usually means the furniture scale or placement is wrong. Empty corners are not always a problem, but they should feel intentional rather than forgotten.
3. Conversation feels awkward
Seats placed too far apart, all facing a television, or positioned at different angles can make a room feel socially disconnected.
4. Storage is far from the activity it supports
Dining items belong near dining, work materials near the desk, and everyday shoes near the entry. Practical adjacency reduces clutter.
5. The room only works for one purpose
Modern homes often need flexibility. A considered plan can allow a room to host work, relaxation and guests without feeling temporary.
Space planning should come before styling. Once the room works, every decorative decision becomes easier and more effective.
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