The pandemic has definitely changed how we define living in a home. For Jason Buensalido, noted architect, “the home before was a place where you just lived after work and during the weekends. Even then, we’d go to malls, concerts, parks, etc.”
For home design, this necessitates more “transitory spaces” that allow the home to remain a safe haven from the virus. Whatever forms these spaces take, from entry foyers to a second entrance, they need to ensure that people can transition from the outside to the inside without posing a threat to their households.
‘If your main concern is remote work, then upgrading your internet to the best plan is enough. But for a family that values quality time, invest in lounge spaces and pieces that make you feel comfortable.’ “Make the living room expand to the lanai, and the lanai to the garden,” says Buensalido. “Instead of fixed furniture, make them moveable and modular to adjust to spatial configurations. In this way, the home can expand, contract, and transform to accommodate the breadth of activities hosted within its borders.”
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