There is a moment in every home project where I get cold feet about my original plan and want to change something. Sometimes it’s just a paint color and other times, like with this kitchen remodel, it involves changing the layout entirely.

At the start of June, I began toying around with the idea of opening up a part of the wall between the kitchen and foyer and adding hanging shelves in the opening. Not long after, I found out we actually had the flexibility within the construction plans to bring down more of the wall and create a kitchen island between the kitchen and the foyer. This was when my wheels REALLY started turning. (If you missed me talking through this idea a month ago, you can watch through the Instagram Stories in this highlight!)

After going back and forth on whether to extend our kitchen remodel into the foyer, we came to a decision. I felt our decision was worthy of a blog post because there can be a lot to learn about how last-minute changes to design plans have the power to affect all of the parts and pieces of a project. Plus, I’ve talked to many folks in the W&D audience who have had similar questions arise when updating older homes, adding additions, and moving through slow and/or DIY remodeling projects. 

Without further ado, let me walk you through my decision-making process around whether or not to extend the scope of the kitchen remodel.

A floor plan of our home before the kitchen remodel.

Why we’ve been considering extending the kitchen into the foyer

We’ve never really known what to do with the foyer space (previously known as the music room) that sits in the center of our home. We tend to use it as an extension of the central hallway. Before the kitchen remodel, we often found ourselves hanging out and spending time in the room, but we’ve never known how to intentionally use it in a way that truly works for our family. This is why I’ve been really interested in shifting the foyer to make it work better for us, and visually connecting the space with the kitchen could be one way to do just that.

Would this change extend the timeline and increase the cost of the remodel?

Yes, it would. We would need to move some electrical wiring, plus purchase and install another slab of stone for the countertop. Plus, the colors I selected for the kitchen (view our material selects in this post!) clash with the stained glass ceiling in the foyer, so we would have to rethink our color selections as well.

An elevation of the original plan for the wall between the kitchen and the foyer.

Here’s why we decided not to extend the kitchen

I was sitting in the kitchen one day recently, thinking through how we might use the foyer space as an extended part of the dining room. It made a lot of sense from the point of view of the kitchen, but when I looked at it in terms of the broader style of the house (and from the perspective of closed concept living, which we’ve grown to prefer in this home), I realized the change would have made a more open, modern layout. It would have created a space that, architecturally, especially with the island’s placement in the center of the house, would have been confusing in the context of the rest of the home’s style. In this instance, inserting this additional feature into a room with a more traditional style would have made the new, more modern part feel less fully integrated in the space. It would have been a bandaid solution that then created a different problem.

We also would’ve created an odd wall connecting the kitchen to the peach room. The floor plan would’ve been open but there would have been a pillar in the middle of the house that wouldn’t have felt intentional.

Additionally, our choice came down to balance and symmetry and the proportions of the space; knowing how much I like symmetry and for things to feel balanced, making this change wouldn’t have been the right decision. Sometimes a layout update may be helpful for the flow of traffic in a home but that doesn’t mean it’s fitting with the overall style. It’s a personal choice, and there are always upsides and drawbacks to both decisions.

In the end, we’ve decided to stick with the original plan.

So, what will the foyer become?

We still don’t know what the foyer will function as! For now, we’ll continue to think of it as a sort of sitting room. The next step will be trying different layouts and figuring out how the entry, foyer, and peach room work together. I’m already beginning to work on this phase of the design and I’ll dig into it even more once the kitchen remodel is wrapped.

If everything goes according to plan, we should be back in our kitchen in a month and a half (or so!!). I’ll be sharing a remodel progress check-in post on the blog later this month, and then we’ll be moving toward the date of completion! I cannot wait to share it with you all.

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