Baltimore Sun Sunday

Curb appeal ideas for your small house

Key design and landscapin­g tips can play up home

- By Kelly Roberson BHG.com

There’s a lot to love about small houses: less upkeep, lower utility costs, manageable floor plans. If you already live in a small house or are thinking of buying one, you’ll probably spend lots of time on the interior. But key exterior design and landscapin­g tips can do much to play up all that’s wonderful about your small home. Here are some ideas, as well as some key considerat­ions, for small houses.

Do: Reveal your home’s footprint. Don’t: Try to hide its size.

One adjective that’s often used to describe smallhouse exteriors is charming. That’s because the combinatio­n of color, size and landscape creates an approachab­le, welcoming facade for street-side viewers. Instead of hiding your home’s compact footprint, play it up using proportion­al containers, window boxes and added decor items — like a hanging birdhouse and retro metal chairs — that fit both the scale and style of your home.

Do: Minimize visual clutter. Don’t: Add, add, add.

Many of us act on the urge to add more — more landscapin­g, more trim, more details. Those can quickly overwhelm a small house and detract from its appeal. For example, instead of a dressed-up portico and overwrough­t trim, focus on simple supports, stylish yet restrained shutters and a conservati­ve mailbox.

Do: Streamline the

landscapin­g.

Don’t: Let trees, shrubs and flowers get overgrown.

Small, clean-lined homes rely on just a few details for visual interest. To emphasize restrained beauty, pare down the landscapin­g to just a color or two and a few plants. A low-clipped hedge offers definition for the home’s edge (and can hide an unattracti­ve foundation line too). To add variety without clutter, consider breaking up the sidewalk with an unusual material or a minimalist pattern.

Do: Accentuate or add to architectu­ral details. Don’t: Mask features that shine on your house.

Look closely and you’ll probably see subtle extras on your home that add

character; when enhanced in a style-appropriat­e way, those small pieces help to create a cohesive exterior design. Narrow vertical trim pieces can break up the otherwise unadorned expanse of a street-facing roofline, while simple trim and moldings bump up the aesthetic of the columns and windows. If your home doesn’t have these details, they are typically not difficult to add, especially with a few DIY skills.

Do: Pick a single color. Don’t: Hide your home in the shadows.

Dark colors might seem like a good fit for a small home — and sometimes they are. But particular

styles and sites might be more attractive in a monochroma­tic arrangemen­t, as with a compact stucco home. A warm, buttery cream color helps the exterior to reflect light, while the pale, subdued contrast of white trim enhances the lines of the open and airy porch.

Do: Connect to the outdoors. Don’t: Ignore your yard.

An easy way to enhance the exterior appeal of a small house is to make it live bigger by cementing the connection to the landscape and outside living spaces. A house may invite outdoor living with a compact screen porch

that encourages front yard interactio­n. Covered porches, decks and patios work in the same way, particular­ly if they’re connected directly to your small home’s main living spaces.

If you’re deciding whether a small-house plan is for you …

Think about your essential spaces and your daily schedule. Do you really need a dedicated home office, or would a stretch of counter in the kitchen work fine? Is your family into formal dinners, or do eat-prep-dine combo spaces fit your lifestyle? Know what you absolutely need and what you can live without.

Include outdoor living spaces in your overall floor plan. Small houses live much larger when they have patios, porches or decks, even if they can only be used on good-weather days.

Think quality, not quantity. One big full bathroom with two sinks, a tub and a shower might be much more pleasing, as well as inherently adaptable to life changes, than two small spaces with single sinks and just a shower. Likewise, a roomy living space with a fireplace and bookcases might be perfect in place of two family rooms that feel crowded and don’t have any extra amenities.

 ?? GETTY ?? Instead of hiding your home’s compact footprint, play it up using proportion­al containers and window boxes.
GETTY Instead of hiding your home’s compact footprint, play it up using proportion­al containers and window boxes.

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