The Arizona Republic

Interior doors can add light, personalit­y

- Melissa Rayworth

Clients are sometimes surprised when home builder and designer Marnie Oursler starts talking about bedroom doors.

They expect to discuss things like windows, wall colors and where a builtin bookcase might fit best. But many of Oursler’s clients hadn’t considered that creatively designed interior doors can add personalit­y, improve the flow of natural light, and also serve as flexible partitions to break up an open floor plan or connect two rooms.

“I’ve been using doors to add character in houses for a long time,” says Delaware-based Oursler, who hosts “Big Beach Builds” on the DIY Network. “Mixing up doors throughout the house is really important,” she says, “and it’s easy.”

We’ve asked Oursler and two other interior design experts – architect Tamara Gorodetzky, an associate with GTM Architects in the Washington, D.C., area, and Caleb Anderson, cofounder of the New York-based Drake/ Anderson – for advice on using interior doors to elevate a home’s style and function.

Doors as design features

Bedroom and bathroom doors can easily be swapped out for a different style, and you don’t have to stick with traditiona­l wood.

“If you look at the magazines now,” Gorodetzky says, “people are doing really creative things like using a lot of steel in their doors instead of wood to give it an industrial look.”

Another option is refinishin­g doors with paint, upholstery or other cover-

ings.

Anderson updated traditiona­l wooden doors in a client’s entryway using a metallic faux finish that turned “this pair of double doors that were very traditiona­l and stuffy” into something eyecatchin­g. “You immediatel­y walked into the apartment and there was this unique finish,” he says. “It was pretty spectacula­r.”

For another client, he had a set of pivoting doors made and upholstere­d in leather, with nickel nail-head detailing. “You don’t have to be afraid to do something bold or different,” Anderson says.

Gorodetzky agrees: “I definitely like the idea of doing a feature door in a place where people will see it,” she says.

Doors as optional walls

By adding a sliding barn door or a set of pivoting doors, you can break up an open space without adding something as permanent as a wall.

“For so long we’ve been in this world of open, open, knock down this wall,” Anderson says. “I’ve seen a lot of people gravitatin­g back toward the ability to close a dining room off … it adds this level of formality.”

Sliding doors can be casual, rustic barn doors with heavy hardware, or something sleek and formal. No matter which style you choose, Oursler says, “they add a lot of character, open or closed.”

Let in more light

Most of us have solid wooden doors throughout our homes. But these designers all say glass doors – clear or frosted for privacy and beauty – are a great way to help natural light flow through a home.

For bedroom doors that lead to a hallway, consider brightenin­g the space by switching to ones with frosted glass windows.

In large master bathrooms that have a separate enclosure for the toilet, or in small powder rooms with no window, a frosted glass door brings natural light and makes the enclosed space seem a little less tiny.

Anderson worked with a client who wanted a separate dining room and kitchen. The challenge was this: The kitchen lacked natural light, while the dining area had plenty. So rather than put up a wall, Anderson added interior partitions and doors made of textured, mottled glass. It was, he says, the “solution to allow natural light in, but to be soft and this natural element.”

 ??  ?? A door with tiny windows can be perfect for a young child’s bedroom.
A door with tiny windows can be perfect for a young child’s bedroom.

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