The Forgotten Room: Why the Most Meaningful Space in Your Home Is the One You Never Stay In
Every room in a house comes with an obvious purpose. The kitchen feeds people. The bedroom restores them. The living room gathers them. The study demands concentration. Even the bathroom has a clearly defined role. The hallway, by contrast, exists only because the other rooms need connecting. It is the architectural equivalent of a sentence between paragraphs, necessary but rarely admired. Most homeowners think about it only when deciding whether it could have been made smaller. Yet this overlooked space raises an unusual question. What if the most overlooked room in a home is also the one that reveals the most about how we live? Unlike every other room, the hallway was never designed to hold us. It asks for no furniture, no activity, and no destination of its own. We do not wake up intending to spend an hour in the corridor. Nobody says they are going to relax in the hallway after a long day. It has no identity beyond movement itself. That apparent lack of purpose has led generations ...