The Centralized Playroom: Why I Killed My Formal Dining Room

Stop fighting the toy migration. Learn why killing the formal dining room for a centralized playroom is the ultimate “design” move for a hard-working home.

When I was a child, there was a period of time, after my parents divorced that we moved in with my Grandparents. A tiny-two-bedroom house, my dad, 2 grandparents, and 8 kids. And somehow, the house was always spotless. As a child, I thought my grandmother must’ve been Superwoman. I still believe that now. But the longer I’ve been a mother, and the more kids we’ve added to the mix, the more I’ve come to realize that the reason everything stayed sane in that tiny little house was because my grandmother relied heavily on systems. Nothing was “Pinterest-worthy” (except maybe the meals), but everything was clean. Everything functioned seamlessly. And I realize now that we often trade function for expectations.

The hard truth is this: you can design a home that looks like the cover of a magazine and it will NEVER look that way without you spending all day cleaning it, simply to take a picture, post it online, and then have the house absolutely destroyed again in a few short minutes. Or, you can go against the trends a little, maybe sacrifice a bit of “what’s expected” and set up a house that works for you in your current season.  

If you had walked into my house five years ago, you would have found a beautiful, “correct” formal dining room that we used exactly twice a year. You also would have found me in the kitchen, tripping over a mountain of plastic blocks while my children clung to my legs. I had a “playroom” back then—it was tucked away in a spare bedroom—but it was a ghost town.

I was living my motherhood by default, following a floor plan designed for a lifestyle I didn’t have. Today, I live by design. I killed the dining room, brought the toys to the hearth, and I’ve never looked back.


The Geography of the Hearth

The biggest mistake we make in home design is assuming children want “their own space.” Children don’t want a “kid cave” in the basement; they want to be where mommy is. In human geography, we call this the Hearth—the center of the home’s warmth and activity.

For the modern homemaker, the hearth is the kitchen and laundry zone.


Architecture for the Small Footprint

Coming from such small beginnings, I am absolutely aware that not every home has a formal dining room or sunroom waiting to be sacrificed. If you are living in a standard three-bedroom ranch or a cozy apartment, your “central” space is likely your living room.

The Artist’s Pencil approach to a small living room isn’t about adding a playroom; it’s about integrating one.


The Social Friction (The “Messy” Truth)

Let’s be honest: there is a certain “shame” in having your home look like a preschool the moment someone walks through the front door. We are conditioned to think the “public” areas of our home should be pristine. But when I think back to when I tried to hide the playroom and pretend that kind of mess didn’t exist in our house, my home ended up being messier than ever. The reality is that the toys WILL end up in the living room no matter what. By embracing that reality instead of fighting it, it became possible for me to clean up the mess in mere seconds because the toys now had a home that was right where they were being played with. It became just as easy to put the toys away as it was to leave them lying out.

My Thriving by Design secret: A central playroom is only chaotic if it doesn’t follow my [abundance, not surplus] rule.


The Pivot to Independent Play

Moving the playroom to the center of our home was the single greatest catalyst for independent play in our house. When my kids don’t feel “sent away,” they are free to settle in. My playroom is more visible than it’s ever been, it’s also never been more played in. The kids actually engage with their toys and siblings for a few hours each morning and afternoon, which gives me the freedom to do the tasks necessary to maintain my hardworking home. So embracing the mess has actually made my home the cleanest it’s ever been.

If you find yourself constantly fighting the toy migration, stop fighting. Look at your floor plan. Where is the “Hearth”? Move the toys there. It might feel like a “messy” choice at first, but you’ll soon find it’s the most organized decision you’ve ever made.


Is your playroom tucked away or at the heart of your home? Does the thought of moving toys into your main living area give you peace or a panic attack? Let’s talk about it in the comments!

Next Up: The Hard-Working Kitchen: A Helping Hand for the One-Handed Mama.