July 26, 2024
Here's how to turn your college kid's former bedroom into a home studio, craft room, library or other space while preserving room for that new freshman's visits home.

Every year, the migration happens. Flocks of kids leave home for college. In the United States, more than 40 percent of new college students move away from home. And you know what that means?

Their parents gain a bedroom.

For Gina, sending her only child away to college was bittersweet. While she missed having her home, being able to transform her daughter’s bedroom into a home office and private retreat took some of the sting away.

“I wanted to make her room into a place I could use without making her feel kicked out,” said Gina, who shares the two-bedroom, 1,600-square-foot home in Chelmsford, Mass., with her husband.

She hired interior designer Debbe Daley, of Portsmouth, NH, to help. “Sending a kid off to college stirs up a lot of emotions for both parent and child,” said Daley. “It’s a moment. The kids go off, and the parents look at this unused space and wonder what to do with it. Leaving the room as it is can be a sad reminder of all the missed activity.”

I must butt in: Folks, homes aren’t museums. Design your home to suit the life you have now, because living in the past robs you of the present and ultimately of your future.

Back to Daley. “Look at the empty space and reassess how you want it to feel and function,” she said. When her daughter went away to college, she turned the freed-up bedroom into a design studio. When her daughter came home on weekends, she slept in the five-foot-tall loft space overhead and used a library ladder to get to it.

“At first she had reservations,” said Daley, who outfitted the area with a bed, pendant lights and small bedside tables that floated off the wall. “But then she thought it was cool, like she was glamping.”

For another family whose son went off to college, Daley turned the boyish room into a posh guest room you might find in a New England B&B. The son loves it.

“Debbe came up with great ideas like removing the bed and putting in a Murphy bed to create space,” Gina said. The Murphy bed stays handsomely folded into the wall until her daughter comes home or a guest visits. This allowed them to add a desk, bookcase and seating, so Gina, a real estate agent, now has a workspace.

But what did Gina’s daughter think?

“She was fine with it,” Gina said. “Her main concern was where her clothes were going to go.” (A girl after my own heart.)

Her clothes remain in the room’s closet. “Maybe down the road, when she is truly off on her own, I can use the closet for my stuff,” she said.

Whether you want to turn your off-to-college-kid’s bedroom into an office, a gym, a recording studio, library, craft room or some other fantasy space, here’s some advice from those who’ve been there:

Embrace the change: “If you do nothing, after a while the room becomes a weird time capsule,” said Daley, who encourages parents to see the transition as a new chapter in their lives, too. “Consider who you’re becoming now that your child has moved on and how you might use this dormant space for that new you.”

Don’t spring it on them: “You aren’t going to change my room, are you?” Some kids ask. Talk about it. Involve them in the discussion. Say, “This is what we have planned. But don’t worry, you will always have a place here.” Then make sure they do, and that it’s not the family room couch. If they seem anxious, don’t rush it.

Ask what matters to them most: Before you put their toy box and comic books on the curb, have them tell you what they want to keep (within reason), then figure out a way to temporarily store these belongings.

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Make rooms flexible: When repurposing a kid’s old bedroom, Daley often uses pullout couches. “You can find some really nice ones with end tables,” she said. Turning a wall closet into a workspace can be a plus for college kids coming home. Remove the closet door, install a dropdown desk, add an upper cabinet and an accent chair.

Wait a few months: Kids feel insecure enough when they go away to college without having their room commandeered. Coming home to what’s familiar can help them feel secure as they adapt to a new normal. Wait until after the first break before remodeling. “You can’t have them go off to college and come home for Thanksgiving and find they don’t have a place,” Daley said. Plus, 24 percent of freshmen don’t finish their first year of college, so there’s that. “You definitely don’t want to move and downsize until you’re sure they’re on their way.”

Marni Jameson has written six home and lifestyle books, including “Downsizing the Blended Home – When Two Households Become One.” Reach her at www.marnijameson.com.

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