Our very 70s entryway (with shoe clutter) |
Today's chilly temps have me thinking about
fireplaces. Warm, cozy fireplaces that make winter in Wisconsin
bearable. Our home already has two wood-burning fireplaces and we
recently added an electric fireplace in the living room. It's the
fireplace we now use the most. 'Cuz all you have to do is flip a switch
and there's instant heat! We love it and our cats love it too.
Best of all, it helped solve a problem with our front entry. The original half-wall in the front entry was really dated-looking, with dark wood spindles. Overall, it made the front entry look cramped and unwelcoming.
It also jutted out into the entry
and it's "L" shape left an awkward space in the living room that was
hard to work with.
Our desk fit just fine but it wasn't a good spot for a work space |
Our big disappointment was finding that the natural slate
floor didn't cover the entire entry, which meant we couldn't move the wall
without replacing the slate tiles already there. We knew we didn't want
to replace the floor due to budget constraints and since we were unable to
locate affordable matching tiles to expand the floor, we decided to keep the
half-wall where it was. That definitely sucked, but after tossing around
some ideas (including making it a built-in seating area with storage), we saw
electric fireplaces on sale in a sales flyer and it just clicked. A
fireplace in the living room would be awesome and would give the half-wall a
reason to exist!
We ripped out the half-wall (spindles and all), finding some
long-dead desiccated mouse carcasses in between the studs. Ew! We
put in a new half-wall, faced with stone veneer, topped with a lovely stained
wood top made by a friend. Yes, it still cuts into the entryway space,
but visually, it doesn't look as dark and confined as it did before and I like
how the stone veneer echoes the colors of the slate floor.
The final project for this is a custom-made narrow bench
with shoe storage for the backside of the half wall to tackle that clutter in
the entryway.