Orlando Sentinel

BREAK THE CYCLE

Ways to make a laundry room somewhere you actually want to spend time

- By Jura Koncius

Your laundry area, whether it’s a tiny closet or a corner of the basement, can actually be a happy place.

In a recent Washington project, Jessica Centella and Kiera Kushlan of Residents Understood designed a laundry space as part of a total basement renovation. Their client, who loves pink, wanted something fun with storage and a sink suitable for bathing dogs. The designers decided a patterned tile would add some spice to the tight space. “White tile was definitely not happening,” Centella says. “We wanted a unique color combinatio­n that you don’t see everywhere.”

At Home Depot, they discovered Merola Egeo Quios encaustic porcelain tiles with an orange, green, black and pink Moroccan-style motif. They installed them on the floor and halfway up the walls, painted the rest of the room with Benjamin Moore’s Super White in eggshell finish, added shelving and installed a farmhouse-style Randolph Morris cast-iron sink. “I would encourage people to think about laundry spaces like they do the rest of the rooms in the house,” Centella says.

Like powder rooms, laundry rooms are often small spaces where you can express your personalit­y with a bit of bold wallpaper and some unexpected flooring. While designers and organizers are coming up with new ways to make the most of these spaces, appliance manufactur­ers are rolling out new features to make washers and dryers more efficient and better-looking.

Here are some ways to refresh, energize and bring joy to the place where you wash your socks. candy. If you worry about the humidity in your laundry space, Nordin recommends Chasing Paper. “They make really cute removable wallpapers that I’ve been using in some laundry rooms and bathrooms,” she says. “They are budget-friendly and easy to take down.”

New York designer Sheila Bridges is a big fan of using wallpaper for impact. “One of my favorite things to do in a small laundry room is to install a bright and cheery wipeable wallpaper,” she says. “No reason to make doing laundry a chore, even if your laundry room is in a basement.” In her own Harlem apartment laundry station, she used a Harlem Toile de Jouy wallpaper of her own design in robin’s-egg blue.

Hildreth sometimes takes a hint from old British manor houses when designing laundry spaces. “Give it a Downton Abbey look,” he says. Such details would include adding traditiona­l beadboard or wainscotti­ng to dress up and protect walls. And look for big wicker baskets, he says, as opposed to using plastic laundry bins.

Bridges likes baskets for detergent and laundry made of various materials including seagrass from West Elm, recycled plastic from Serena & Lily and water hyacinth from the Container Store. She’s also fond of using indoor/outdoor rugs that are washable or wipeable and won’t get damaged if they get wet.

“Go for anything that makes laundry less of a chore,” says Meg Wittman, a Neat Method profession­al organizer. Wittman says some of her go-to laundry products are the Container Store’s iDesign Linus clear plastic bins, Steele Canvas rolling laundry hampers and West Elm’s Bamboo Butterfly double hamper.

Centella loves using trays to help corral supplies. “Even a bunch of ugly soap bottles can look more contained and pretty on a nice tray,” she says. She often uses a flipdown wall hook (the Stainless Steel Lanca Valet Flip-Down Wall Hook from the Container Store, $29.99), which folds down to provide a spot to dry delicates or hang clothes and can be folded up when not in use.

Some of the latest machines are targeted toward millennial­s looking for efficient internet-connected products and condominiu­m dwellers looking for space-saving solutions. According to Joshua Stumacher, Samsung product marketing director, Samsung’s 6300 Smart Front Load Washer has WiFi connectivi­ty that tells you when a cycle is complete, and it has faster speeds so you can do a full load in 30 minutes.

Most space-strapped consumers still prefer the larger-capacity 27-inch-wide models vs. 24-inch models, says Brendan Bosch, Whirlpool’s marketing director for laundry appliances. So, Whirlpool designed a shallower “closet-depth” 27-inch washer and dryer to fit into more compact places. Some have a “load and go” feature that allows you to put 40 loads worth of detergent in a machine, alleviatin­g the need to store big containers of detergent.

If you have a side-by-side washer and dryer, consider putting a counter on top. If you’re doing a lot of renovating, you might use the same counter material as you have in your kitchen.

For those with stacking units and no extra counter space, Nordin says to try a wall-mounted collapsibl­e table, such Isasar’s Wall-Mounted Folding Table ($179.99 on Amazon). “Put a painting or photo on the bottom so it masquerade­s as a framed piece of art when not in use as a folding station,” she says.

Make an effort to make your folding area attractive. “Even in an old, dark basement, there are things you can do without spending a lot of money,” Hildreth says. For a nice folding surface, he suggests finding an old farm table at a yard sale or flea market, or painting an old dining table. It’s nice to also upgrade the lighting (especially in a basement): A new fixture, Hildreth adds, such as the retro-looking Rejuvenati­on Carson or Abigail flush-mount lights, would make the area brighter and cheerier.

When square footage is at a premium, laundry rooms can be multipurpo­se, combined with an entryway, utility room, home office, gift-wrapping station or petcare area. Build in room for bulk supply storage or places for household basics such as light bulbs or tools. Consider how you can use the space most efficientl­y.

 ?? JOSH HILDRETH ?? The idea for this Josh Hildreth design in Bethesda, Maryland, was to create a space that accommodat­ed laundry, flower arranging and coats. The cabinetry and Cotswold blue stone floors give it a farmhouse look.
JOSH HILDRETH The idea for this Josh Hildreth design in Bethesda, Maryland, was to create a space that accommodat­ed laundry, flower arranging and coats. The cabinetry and Cotswold blue stone floors give it a farmhouse look.

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