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Why the Entryway Is the Most Critical Room in Your House

The entryway suffers from an image problem. Homeowners obsess over kitchens because they entertain there. They invest heavily in living rooms because guests spend time there. They renovate bathrooms, redesign bedrooms, and debate dining room lighting for months. Meanwhile, the entryway often becomes an afterthought—a narrow passage furnished with a console table, a mirror, and perhaps a bowl for keys. Yet some designers, architects, psychologists, and historians would argue that this small transitional space may be the most important room in the entire house, not because of how much time people spend there, but because of what it does. The entryway is the only room every person experiences. Guests may never see the bedrooms. They might not enter the kitchen. Some may never move beyond the front room. Everyone, however, passes through the entryway. It is the first impression, the final impression, and the psychological threshold between the outside world and private life. Architect Fran...

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