Laundry in a Closet?

Updated on March 17, 2018
J.G. asks from Champaign, IL
7 answers

You ladies posses a wealth of superior household management skills. I have a minor dilemma that I'm hoping you can help me solve.

We are making some structural changes to our house to help with it's flow. To do this, they (the architect and hubby) want to ripe out the laundry room. It is currently located right off the kitchen. The home is a ranch, and my bedroom is off this side of the house. They want to tear out the wall between the kitchen and laundry and just add the laundry space on to the kitchen. They would then put the washer/dryer and sink in a closet on one side, and then put the pantry on the other. So it would be like a long galley kitchen (though its too wide for a real galley kitchen). The laundry room currently is a step down from the kitchen. I have no idea if they plan on keeping it this way or making it all one level.

I fly lady, so I start and end every day with laundry. The only time I have laundry on the floor is on the days I wash all the linens and blankets. Hubby's solution is to put a pocket door or sliding door between the two areas that I can close on these days so I don't have to look at the laundry.

I just do not know how I feel about not having an actual laundry room. I currently have a massive laundry space that has lots of cabinets and a decent pantry closet off of it. The remodel will not really change the storage -new closets and cabinets will be built. I would lose space for my drying rack, and would then have to set it up every time I need to use it.

What do you think about the laundry room being European style and behind a closet?

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So What Happened?

I just want to add that the closet will be in a very large space, so I will have the space to fold things, etc. The current laundry room is in the middle of the house and it has no windows. It's dark and creates issues with flow. You can get to the master/guest bedroom wing but you have to walk through the 2 laundry room doors and go around another wall to get to it. Or you have to walk through the dining room, through the family room, and then you can access the master area hallway. This would also let the light from the kitchen/dining area (it's all windows) enter this space and it would also make it easier to access the master without going through a confusing maze.

It would have a sink. I'm thinking I'd be OK with it if there was enough room for a built in laundry hamper I could put the dirty kitchen towels in (they currently go into a laundry basket). I don't know if there is room for something like this, but if there was a built in like that, it might be OK. We generally store cloths in hampers in the bedrooms, and then I carry them to the laundry. I was thinking of buying a nice hamper on wheels to move the laundry, so maybe I could use that to store the bedding in, and with a pocket door to close it off, it might not be so bad. It would give us a massive kitchen. It's current dimensions are 18 x 13, and the laundry is 11 X 10, so it would be 29 in length! The rest of the house is very open and airy, so this would add to that effect. We were already going to put in pocket doors or glass screens (japanese style) to the doors to the sunroom, so we could put matching doors cutting off the actual kitchen from the new pantry/laundry space.

My instinct says I must have a laundry room, but I'm wondering if that's because I've already had one. Maybe I just need to be creative? A built in laundry hamper to put the stuff in so it doesn't need to be on the floor would be nice.

More Answers

D.B.

answers from Boston on

I think it must be frustrating for the hubby and the architect to downsize a room they don't use all the time and just assume that you, the chief laundry-doer, will manage. You don't know how you feel about it, but they're moving ahead with plans?

I think keeping a sink in the laundry area is a good start. You mention a drying rack, and I think it might help to look into a fold-up or recessed laundry rack that folds out as needed as opposed to a stand-on-the-floor rack. Perhaps if it folded out over the sink, that would work well for drip-drying. That depends, of course, on how much you have to hang up on a daily basis. There are also those retractable clotheslines like they have in hotel rooms, or a closet rod (which I have). My laundry is in a slight closet - there's no sink, but there is room for a tall hamper between the wall and the open dryer door, along with 2 shelves and a closet rod. There is room for us to stand in there while loading the washer too. There's not a lot of folding space except the top of the washer and dryer though. I don't have a drying rack although I do hang a few things from hangers (like lingerie which I wash on the gentle cycle but don't put in the dryer). We don't have a pocket door due to the location in a back hall and near the back door, but if I wee redesigning the space the way you are, I would look at a pocket door Another factor would be whether you have hampers in any of the bedrooms or whether all dirty laundry gets carried to the laundry room on a daily basis - if the latter, you need a lot more room than a closet. My husband does most of the laundry since he is a runner and has a lot of sweaty stuff. We rarely wash blankets because they are between a sheet and a bedspread so don't get dirty, dusty or sweaty at all. If I were doing a lot of linens and blankets for a family though, I would think more room would be important.

Still, having a bigger kitchen and better flow for everyone would be a real plus.

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M.S.

answers from Washington DC on

I do my laundry in my basement. If I had a real first floor laundry room, I would NEVER give it up and downsize to a closet. In fact, I don't think I would give up my laundry in the basement for a first floor closet. I need space to sort and hang to dry and toss the sheets, towels etc in a pile if someone is sick and I need to move fast. I would put hubby in charge of the laundry if he insists on this plan. I'm guessing the Europeans would prefer a room to a closet, if they had the space.

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M.G.

answers from Portland on

I have what you currently have. NO way I would go to a closet. Don't you stash stuff in there when guests come by unexpectedly? I do. I throw wet gear in there, snowsuits, stuff I will deal with later, etc. I would miss that.

My friends with closet laundry have it on their upper floors - because they couldn't put a laundry room upstairs (weren't willing to sacrifice a bedroom or bathroom). It was a luxury to have upstairs. Their landings are cluttered with laundry - but no one can see it as upstairs.

For me personally - it would be a no.

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C.C.

answers from New York on

I have a friend who once owned a Murphy Bed (bed that folds into wall storage) in a small apartment because she thought it would give her more space - every morning she could fold up her bed and use her full space for entertaining etc. But, life was busy, and reality became that the bed just stayed down in place like a "normal bed".

I foresee a similar thing happening in your situation with this "remodeling". I bet you'll end up keeping the sliding doors closed and the closet open - also known as, a laundry room!

The situations in which I have known of the concept of washer/dryer in a closet working well (a closet too small to stand inside, not a room) have been small apartments or vacation homes where laundry is not very much and not done very frequently. In your situation, a laundry room really seems to make more sense.

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M.D.

answers from Pittsburgh on

My laundry is in a closet and I have a system a lot like yours. I grew up with a laundry room so I thought it was odd at first but now that I’m used to it, I really don’t find it to be a big deal. It does mean that I have to keep up with things. I can’t leave a load of unfolded laundry lying around because there is no closed room to hide it in. But that’s ok, it keeps me from procrastinating and I do 1 load every day to keep it from accumulating.

My laundry closet is big enough that I have a full size washer and dryer side by side and a large shelf above it that holds my detergents, a small trash can (for easy disposal of dryer lint) and a laundry basket that I use for kitchen cleaning towels, bathroom hand towels, etc, that I collect over time and wash periodically. Every room has its own hamper for clothes. When I do sheets, I pull them off the bed and put them straight into the washer. When they are done, I put them back on the bed so they don’t lay around either. I set up the drying rack in my bedroom on days that I wash delicates.

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S.T.

answers from Washington DC on

ish. i dunno. i like having a laundry room, even though i have to go downstairs to the basement to access my laundry. our washer and dryer in our starter home were in the kitchen behind a closet door, and it felt cluttered.

well, it WAS cluttered. it was a small kitchen already.

if your newly designed galley kitchen will be so large that it won't impede the flow, and the laundry 'closet' is actually so large that you can work effectively inside it, it could work.

but it's a lot of ifs. i'd have to see it, of course, but i'd be skeptical.
khairete
S.

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B.C.

answers from Norfolk on

Our laundry room is not large but I wouldn't call it a closet.
It has a sink and a few cupboards.
I think if it has a sink it's not really a closet space - just a smaller laundry room.
In our old house we had the washer and dryer in a closet behind bi fold doors and next to the water heater.
While it wasn't a problem (had to move washer and dryer out of the way to replace the water heater) - I much prefer having the washer/dryer in a more open space (laundry room) even if the room is small.

Laundry room and walk in pantry are not fancy areas although people like to close them off - can you combine them into one close off-able space?
A wall mounted drying rack that folds flat against the wall when not in use might be useful.
Sometimes people will have washer and dryer right in the kitchen and not hide them at all.

It's hard to picture your layout without seeing it.

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