Open ground plans and extra casual life have seen eating rooms go the best way of the dodo in previous a long time, says architect, writer and cook dinner, John Ota. They’re seen as too fussy, too formal and a luxurious by way of house.
Ota is making a case for the return of the eating room, along with his new guide out in late March,
The Eating Room,
and it’s a reasonably convincing one.
Eating rooms have introduced individuals collectively for hundreds of years, permitting information, traditions and household values to be handed down in a big method, he says. You don’t want a eating room to do that, however should you can swing it, it’s fairly good.
Ota wrote first about kitchens, releasing
The Kitchen: A journey by means of historical past in the hunt for excellent design,
in 2020, after which turned his consideration to the room subsequent door.
“I wished to discover the eating room, as a result of whereas I used to be doing the kitchen, individuals would say ‘the eating room is lifeless,’ and I assumed, geez, that doesn’t sound excellent to me,” he says.
Ota additionally had private motivation, in that his spouse had been gravely ailing and lately recovered, and he wished to rejoice this, surrounded by the individuals they love.
“When she had a big birthday arising, I knew it was time for an enormous celebration, an enormous dinner and a brand new eating room. Earlier than I began to revamp, I wished to know all the things in regards to the eating room.”
Visiting well-known eating rooms all over the world
Ota travelled extensively for his analysis, visiting the eating rooms of Jackie Kennedy, Claude Monet, Frida Kahlo and Martin Luther King Jr., amongst others.
Eating rooms are the place individuals collect to speak, and nice issues have come from these conversations, he says.
In Monet’s dwelling in Giverny, France, the eating room partitions are painted a glowing yellow. Ota believes that color was deliberate, even when Monet by no means formally defined it.
“For the impressionists, yellow was greater than only a fairly color. It was a connection to nature, gentle and the solar,” he says.
In Atlanta, on the childhood dwelling of Martin Luther King Jr, the eating room performed a profound position. It was on the eating desk that King’s dad and mom first defined racial prejudice to him after he was forbidden from visiting a pal, says Ota. The eating room is the place King first developed his concepts and ideas.
Some of the fascinating issues Ota noticed in historic eating rooms was the significance of sunshine. Earlier than electrical energy, rooms had been designed to answer candlelight. Gold edging on china, gold flocked wallpaper, and even gold leaf ceilings had been there to catch the glint.
“I believe one of many issues we would have misplaced is that love of the candlelight,” he says.

It’s such a easy concept. You don’t want a stately dwelling, you possibly can merely dim the lights, gentle a candle and soften the temper. The glow flatters everybody and slows the tempo.
“It’s not in regards to the excellent dish, it’s not in regards to the excellent chair or the proper clothes. It’s actually about getting collectively.”
In a world obsessive about excellent kitchens and matching chairs, maybe the extra radical act is solely to ask individuals over.
A separate eating room isn’t that frequent in most properties as we speak, says Ota. As a substitute, we now have open-plan areas the place kitchen, residing and eating areas circulation collectively. He sees this as a part of a broader shift towards informality:
“The separate, stand-alone eating room is much less frequent and more durable to seek out now within the twenty first century.”
Ota doesn’t see this as a loss, however quite an evolution. His associates have an area of their dwelling they name ‘the nice room’ the place they typically host their family and friends, and folks like to go there, he says.
In nice rooms, chairs don’t have to match, dishes might be eclectic, and the temper might be simple.
If something, that informality could encourage extra frequent gatherings. You don’t have to stage a banquet. A protracted Sunday lunch with mismatched plates might be simply as significant, says Ota.
Small gestures, large impression
Throughout his eating room analysis, Ota realized that Martha Washington was recognized for greeting her visitors on the door with lemonade sprinkled with cinnamon. Edith Wharton welcomed guests with champagne.
No butler or silver tray required, says Ota. However he picked up some easy ideas for good internet hosting: Hold glowing water chilled. Arrange a easy drinks station close to the entry and provide your visitors one thing refreshing as quickly as they arrive, because it units a pleasant tone.
Ota additionally believes the buffet is the best way ahead in our period of dietary preferences and restrictions. It removes strain and lets visitors select what works for them. It feels beneficiant and relaxed.
After his spouse Franny recovered from a severe stroke, Ota did renovate their eating room and host a big birthday celebration for her. It was not in regards to the desk settings, however gratitude, he says.
“We all know we’re fortunate.”
John Ota’s new guide, The Eating Room: Exploring the design of twelve iconic rooms in the hunt for the proper eating expertise, is out there March 24. There shall be a Vancouver guide launch at
Inform Interiors on April 7
.
Associated
Herschel co-founder launches dwelling items model centered on on a regular basis necessities
A small B.C. ski lodge is constructed to final











