August 1, 2007

Home Design for Reduced Maintenance

If you design for low maintenance from the beginning, or spend time making a few changes designed for low maintenance, you can reduce your regular chores for years into the future, a great way to get a really huge time-savings payback!

Reduce the amount of mess and dirt coming into the house

This is your first line of defense. Mats should be placed outside and inside all doors. The kind of mats you want are the ones which really remove dirt from shoes, not the kind which are decorative only. If your family tends to have REALLY muddy shoes and boots, a bootscraper outside the door is an old-fashioned item which still works well.

To cut down on airborne dirt, seal and caulk all gaps round windows and doors and other building penetrations like pipes and wires. This will help with heating and cooling bills too. If you need to in your area, use insect screens on your windows and doors.

Inside, corral the mess and limit its spread

Assuming you do actually want to LIVE in this house, not just exist, it’s impossible not to create any mess at all - but you can take steps to make it easier to clean up.

Do mess-creating activities in one specific area, preferably with a closable door. If you’re doing something that makes dust, shavings, fumes etc, close the door to keep them out of the rest of the house. Make sure to clean your filters frequently if you have a forced-air heating or cooling system, to stop dust and dirt being spread around the house.

Simplify everything:

  • create built-in seating and storage (no spaces underneath or behind to clean)
  • reduce the number of decorative objects and twiddly bits
  • keep window coverings to the fewest, simplest number of layers that will do the job
  • limit open display to only those objects you really love, and keep everything else behind closed doors
  • reduce the amount of stuff you own (declutter!)

Choose easy-to-maintain finishes:

  • brushed plumbing fitting finishes instead of shiny.
  • easily-cleaned paint finishes (usually gloss, satin or eggshell rather than flat)
  • hard floors with few joints (avoid the hardwood or laminate floors with chamfered groove joints between every plank!)
  • wall-to-wall carpets instead of area rugs
  • smooth kitchen finishes instead of textured

Resource List

Get Organized and Stay Organized
Garage Storage Systems
Home Organization Tools
Kitchen Organization
Pantry Organizers and Shelving

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July 20, 2007

Ouch! No more stepping on LEGO pieces in the dark!

Toys with lots of small parts (like LEGO and other construction toys) are an ongoing storage and organization problem. The pieces tend to spread themselves about during play, and then it takes a long time to gather them all up to put them away. And if you’ve ever stepped on a LEGO brick on the way to the bathroom in the middle of the night, you know why I headed this post “Ouch!” (The actual words used in this situation are not suitable for a family-friendly blog… )

The LEGO company used to produce an item which is perfect for this situation -a large circular playmat with a drawstring round the edge.

When it’s time to play, the pieces (well, most of them!) stay on the mat, then at the end of the session, it’s easy to scoot any strays back onto the mat, draw up the edge string to turn it into a bag, and hang the bag from a hook.

You could easily make one of these from a bedsheet cut into a circle, with a casing sewn around the edge, and a looooong string run through the casing.

If your kids need to keep some parts separate from the rest of the collection, use clear screw-top plastic jars (like peanut butter jars) or other sturdy containers with lids that won’t come off inside the bag. The kind of plastic boxes with multiple compartments inside are really great for storing lots of tiny detail parts, or LEGO people - look for well-made fishing tackle or tool boxes with positive locking clips instead of just a lip to hold the lid closed.

Resources:

The LEGO Company Shop-at-home service: more LEGO pieces than you could ever need (don’t show your kids this site!)

Lions Gate Models custom LEGO city and town models - free building instructions for LEGO cars and trucks and a huge hospital, and many more instructions to buy.

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