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AR Design Studio is an award-winning RIBA certified contemporary architectural practice, based in Winchester, Hampshire, specialising in elegant modern new homes, extensions, renovations and multi-plot developments.

How to Design Living Spaces Around How You Actually Live

The modern home has evolved significantly in recent years.

Kitchens are now social hubs, dining areas have become flexible gathering spaces, and living rooms often serve multiple functions throughout the day from working and studying to relaxing and entertaining.

Yet despite this shift, many homes are still designed around generic layouts or short-lived trends rather than the realities of everyday life.

The most successful homes begin with a simple question: how do you actually live?

At AR Design Studio, we believe great design starts by understanding the routines, habits, priorities, and personalities of the people who will use the space every day. When living, dining, and kitchen areas are designed holistically around real life, homes become more comfortable, functional, and enjoyable to live in long term.

Here are some of the key principles we consider when designing spaces that genuinely support modern living.

Start With Lifestyle, Not Layouts

Before discussing finishes, furniture, or appliances, it is important to understand how a household functions day to day.

Every family or homeowner uses space differently. Some clients prioritise entertaining and social cooking, while others need calm, quieter environments with separation between activities. Some homes revolve around family life and shared routines, while others focus on flexibility, work-life balance, or connection to the outdoors.

Understanding these patterns allows the design to respond naturally to the people living there.

Questions we often explore include:

  • Where do you spend most of your time at home?

  • Do you cook regularly or casually?

  • How often do you entertain guests?

  • Do children need visibility and supervision?

  • Is home working part of daily life?

  • Do you prefer open-plan living or more defined spaces?

  • What feels frustrating about your current home?

The answers shape everything from layout and circulation to lighting and storage.

Design Around How Spaces Flow Together

Living, dining, and kitchen spaces rarely function independently anymore. The relationship between them is often more important than the individual rooms themselves.

Successful layouts create a natural sense of connection while still allowing different activities to coexist comfortably.

We carefully consider:

  • Movement through the home

  • Sightlines between spaces

  • Access to gardens and outdoor areas

  • Natural gathering points

  • Areas of privacy and retreat

  • Noise and acoustics

  • Daylight throughout the day

The aim is to create spaces that feel intuitive and effortless to use.

Open-Plan Living Should Still Feel Comfortable

Open-plan layouts remain highly desirable because they encourage connection, flexibility, and light. However, openness alone does not guarantee good design.

Without careful planning, large open spaces can feel noisy, cluttered, or lacking in intimacy.

The most successful open-plan homes subtly define different zones without fully separating them.

This can be achieved through:

  • Changes in ceiling height

  • Structural framing

  • Joinery and shelving

  • Lighting design

  • Flooring transitions

  • Furniture placement

  • Partial walls or screens

Well-balanced spaces allow family life, cooking, entertaining, and relaxation to happen simultaneously without conflict.

Kitchens Should Reflect Real Habits

The kitchen is often the heart of the home, but every household uses it differently.

Some clients require highly functional cooking spaces with generous preparation areas and specialist storage. Others prioritise sociability, wanting guests and family to gather comfortably while meals are prepared.

Rather than designing around trends, we focus on how the kitchen supports everyday routines.

This may include:

  • Islands designed for conversation and dining

  • Walk-in pantry storage

  • Integrated appliances

  • Dedicated coffee or breakfast areas

  • Flexible seating arrangements

  • Clear circulation routes

  • Visual connection to living and outdoor spaces

A well-designed kitchen should feel practical, calm, and welcoming at all times of day.

Dining Spaces Should Be Flexible

Formal dining rooms are no longer essential for many households, but dining remains an important social activity.

Today’s dining areas often need to accommodate:

  • Family meals

  • Entertaining guests

  • Homework and studying

  • Home working

  • Informal gatherings

Flexibility is therefore key.

We often design dining spaces that can expand or adapt easily while remaining integrated into the wider home rather than isolated from it.

Natural light, proximity to the kitchen, and views to outdoor spaces all contribute significantly to how enjoyable dining spaces feel in everyday use.

Living Spaces Should Support Both Connection and Retreat

Living areas should feel comfortable, emotionally warm, and adaptable to different moods and activities.

Some homeowners prefer highly sociable family spaces, while others value quieter environments where they can retreat and relax.

Successful living spaces often balance:

  • Openness and privacy

  • Natural light and enclosure

  • Social interaction and quiet retreat

  • Technology integration and visual calm

Architectural detailing, material choices, acoustics, and furniture layouts all contribute to creating spaces that feel genuinely comfortable rather than simply visually impressive.

Light Is Fundamental to How a Home Feels

Natural light plays a major role in shaping atmosphere, wellbeing, and comfort.

We carefully consider:

  • Orientation and sunlight patterns

  • Framed garden views

  • Rooflights and glazed openings

  • Seasonal changes in daylight

  • Layered artificial lighting

  • Evening ambience

Well-designed lighting creates homes that feel uplifting during the day and calm, warm, and inviting at night.

Storage Creates Calm

One of the most overlooked aspects of good residential design is integrated storage.

When storage is carefully considered from the outset, homes feel calmer, more organised, and easier to live in.

This may include:

  • Concealed joinery

  • Utility and pantry spaces

  • Built-in shelving

  • Window seating storage

  • Integrated media units

  • Flexible family storage

Thoughtful storage reduces visual clutter and allows living spaces to remain adaptable over time.

Materials Should Be Designed for Daily Life

The most successful homes balance beauty with durability.

Material selections should reflect not only the visual character of the home, but also the realities of everyday living.

For busy family homes, this may involve:

  • Durable flooring

  • Robust surfaces

  • Easy-to-maintain finishes

  • Soft acoustics

  • Warm tactile materials

Timeless materials often age more gracefully than highly trend-driven choices, creating homes that continue to feel relevant and comfortable for years to come.

Design for the Future, Not Just the Present

Homes should adapt as lifestyles evolve.

Children grow older, working habits change, entertaining patterns shift, and long-term accessibility may become increasingly important.

Designing with flexibility in mind allows spaces to evolve naturally over time.

This may include:

  • Adaptable layouts

  • Flexible furniture arrangements

  • Accessible circulation

  • Future-proofed services and technology

  • Durable long-lasting materials

The best homes continue to support their owners long after completion.

Ultimately, successful homes are not designed around trends, showrooms, or social media images. They are designed around people.

When living, dining, and kitchen spaces respond thoughtfully to how clients actually live, homes become more intuitive, comfortable, and rewarding to inhabit every day.

Whether renovating an existing property, extending a family home, or designing a new build, understanding lifestyle first always leads to more meaningful architecture — spaces that not only look beautiful, but genuinely improve the experience of living.

 
Andy Ramus