Open plan layouts have become a familiar feature in modern British homes. Extensions into the rear of terraces, knocked through walls in 1930s semis and new build kitchen diners have all contributed to this shift. The appeal is clear. Light moves further, family life flows more naturally and entertaining feels easier. The challenge is choosing furniture that works with this openness rather than against it.
We have helped many customers at Furniture in Fashion furnish open plan spaces over the years, and the same principles tend to apply across very different homes.
The first job in an open plan room is to give each function its own identity. A living zone, a dining zone and sometimes a workspace need to feel distinct, even if they share air and light. Furniture is the simplest way to draw these invisible lines.
A sofa placed with its back to the dining area creates a clear divide between the two zones. A long sideboard against a wall does the same for storage and display, while keeping the floor visually open. Our sideboard collection includes wide and narrow options that suit different room depths.
In open plan layouts, a sofa is doing more than offering seating. It is shaping the room. A corner shape can anchor the living area and pull it together. If your room is rectangular and long, a corner sofa along one side keeps the rest of the floor uncluttered. Have a look at our corner sofa options, which come in fabric and leather finishes to suit varied colour schemes.
If the layout is more square, a pair of smaller sofas facing each other can work better than one large piece. This arrangement also makes conversation easier when guests are over.
In an open plan space, the dining table is rarely viewed in isolation. It is always seen alongside the sofa, the kitchen and the surrounding floor area. The finish and proportions need to sit comfortably with everything around them.
Extending tables are particularly useful here. They allow you to keep the everyday footprint small and only stretch out when needed. Browse our extending dining tables for designs that suit families and frequent hosts alike. Pair them with chairs that share a tone with your living area to keep the room cohesive.
Open plan rooms suffer when clutter has nowhere to go. Without doors between zones, mess in one area becomes visible from another. Considered storage is essential. A TV unit with closed compartments hides cables and clutter, while a bookcase keeps reading material tidy and on display. Our TV units work well as a focal point in the living zone without overwhelming it.
If the room is short on storage, dual purpose pieces help. Coffee tables with shelves, ottomans with internal compartments and dining benches with hidden storage all give back floor space.
Open plan rooms tend to rely heavily on the main ceiling light, which often leaves the room feeling flat. Layered lighting changes everything. A pendant over the dining table, a floor lamp beside the sofa and a small table lamp on a sideboard help separate the zones at night. The room reads as several spaces rather than one long one.
A rug under the sofa and coffee table marks the living zone clearly. A second rug under the dining table is optional, but in larger open plan rooms it can stop the table from looking adrift. The two rugs should share a tone family without being identical, which gives the room a sense of flow.
With so much of the home visible at once, a tight colour palette helps the eye relax. Pick a base of neutrals, then add one or two accent shades that repeat across the zones. A cushion colour can pick up a vase, which can pick up a piece of wall art across the room. Small repetitions like this give an open plan home a finished, intentional look.
Usually the sofa, because it shapes the living zone and divides it from the dining or kitchen area.
They do not need to match, but they should share a tone or material thread so the room feels coherent.
Large enough for the front legs of the main seating to sit on it. A rug that is too small makes the zone feel disconnected.
In open plan homes, yes. It keeps the daily layout compact and gives flexibility for larger gatherings.
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