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One advantage Chicago has over some of the other major cities in the U.S. is more square footage on average. "We are lucky in Chicago that most of the rooms in our clients' homes are decently sized when compared to other cities like New York," says Tom Riker of James Thomas Design. "We have the luxury of specifying pieces that are on a grander scale than many residences in other cities."
by jamesthomas, LLC
The spacious homes have spurred innovation, too. "The long, narrow lots that distinguish typical Chicago residences present certain proportion and layout challenges," says interior designer Lisa Wolfe. "Our common three-flat condos and single-family homes are often only 20 to 30 feet wide and can feel like one long hallway. We find ourselves creating many custom pieces to accommodate this, most often dining banquettes."

The layouts also encourage opening up the floor plans. "Kitchens and living areas are often open to each other, and families practically live in these busy, compact areas," Wolfe describes. "Squeezing multiple functions into a small space while maintaining that main walkway through the home requires some serious editing and smart design."
by Lisa Wolfe Design, Ltd  
"Chicagoans don’t equate square footage with luxury," Wolfe continues. "They have learned to value practical, intelligent and beautiful design over a McMansion sense of scale. We’ve been ditching the established notions of formal rooms for blended, multifunctional zones. Dining and living rooms are often one shared space, delineated by cleverly placed furniture."
by Lisa Wolfe Design, Ltd  
"Because of space limitations in Chicago, we find ways to creatively repurpose spaces for maximum impact," Wolfe says. "For example, in a one-bedroom condo, we knocked down a wall to create a functional and decorative bookcase. This opened up the boxy room layout and created a welcoming hallway between the entry and living room."
by Lisa Wolfe Design, Ltd
A lot of the residential space in Chicago is many stories above street level. "A huge misconception about Chicago design is that designing in a high-rise is difficult," says Emily Mackie of Inspired Interiors. "I actually think planning a remodel in a high-rise is very straightforward and structured. There are more rules and reqirements, but they help guide your overall design for the space."
by Inspired Interiors  
Interior designer Mia Rao agrees. "The urban view is distinctive. We often design high-rise spaces with urban and high-rise views, which can be typical in other major cities. However, in Chicago, there is often attention paid to Lake Michigan," she says. "Many high-rise condos have some sort of lake view, and people play off the water with regard to color scheme and design."

The lake views inspired the condo design seen here. "We worked with grays and cool peacock-green tones, which are both colors that are often present in the color of the lake depending on the daylight and weather," Rao says. "Along with the lakefront, many high-rise homes focus on another unique natural element to Chicago: Lincoln Park. We enjoy playing off these themes and bringing the outside in with our interior designs."
by Mia Rao Design  
This is a fresh take that honors the past in Ludwig Mies van der Rohe's iconic International style apartment buildings at 860-880 Lake Shore Drive, which enjoy sweeping views of Lake Michigan. The designers used iconic Miesian furniture. A well-placed Barcelona sofa keeps the view open while emphasizing low-slung horizontal lines.
by Powell/Kleinschmidt, Inc.  
"While the Midwest in general is more conservative than either coast, the design community in Chicago is as talented if not more so than our seaboard counterparts." says interior designer Michael Abrams. "While we are not a city typically known for the of-the-moment look, we are a city of designers with tremendous talent that has continually produced some of the best interiors across the country."

Abrams cites this penthouse duplex apartment as a great example of Chicago's "clean, urban, transitional design," as he puts it.
by Michael Abrams Limited  
Riker concurs. "We think that there is a misconception that design in Chicago is timid or conservative as compared to L.A. or New York. We find that in our practice, this is not all true," he says. "Most of our clients travel internationally for both work and pleasure, and are therefore open to new ideas and concepts. One of our most popular requests is that our clients want their homes to be unique and not cookie cutter. They are willing to experiment to push the envelope in terms of design."
by jamesthomas, LLC
This is one of Rao's bedroom interpretations of Chicago's sleek urban style.
by Mia Rao Design  
Many designers also note Chicagoans' willingness to incorporate and define their city's emerging trends. "While many of the houses in Chicago lean toward the traditional, I see more and more clients willing to take risks with mixing modern furnishings in traditional homes," Zaveloff says. "People are more open to having fun with mixing eras and styles rather than being rigid. I also have more clients willing to use vintage pieces and, more importantly, willing to wait for the time necessary to find the perfect piece."
by Rebekah Zaveloff  
"A little bit of bling, tempered with a bit of industrial edginess on a traditional base, is also something Chicagoans seem to be more open to these days," Zaveloff says. "Most of my clients aren’t looking for safe and transitional; they’re looking for something that expresses who they are or who they want to be."
by Rebekah Zaveloff  
A new trend in kitchen design in Chicago is refrigerator-freezer columns, according to Mackie. In this kitchen a separate refrigerator and freezer anchor the cabinet wall. "Separating the normal, huge refrigerator into two components makes symmetry and balance much more achievable in the interior space plan," she says. "There is no longer a huge whopping refrigerator visually disrupting your beautiful new kitchen design."
by Inspired Interiors  
"We are definitely seeing brass — especially antique brass — coming back strong," Riker says. "We are using it for everything from light fixtures to door and cabinet hardware. It is very classic and timeless. Polished brass is a bit harsh and still feels a little '80s, but we love the look and feel of aged, antique brass."
by jamesthomas, LLC
Zaveloff is noticing the same popularity in the material. "An openness to mixing metal finishes and other materials in kitchens is on the upswing. I don’t get wide eyes and nervous twitches anymore when I suggest antique brass light fixtures over an island when the hardware is nickel, appliances are stainless and the bar stools are chrome," she says.

See more about how to mix metal finishes in the kitchen
by Rebekah Zaveloff
"When designing a Chicago home, I find that most people like to mix things up, using modern pieces along with primitive pieces," says interior designer Jennifer Harris. "Antiques get a fair play too, whether they have sentimental value or are simply a piece that a client just fell in love with."

Harris often freshens up antiques with a coat of semigloss paint or by reupholstering them in a wild, funky or ethnic fabric.
by Jennifer Harris Interiors
And Chicagoans are going bold as well. Harris has discovered a fearless, anything-goes attitude toward interior color palettes. "I have seen bright colors, neutral colors and even pastels used as color schemes in Chicago homes. It is all in the way it is put together that makes a pleasing statement," she says.
by Jennifer Harris Interiors
Meanwhile, Wolfe is hearing a lot of requests for cocktail bars. "More and more clients want a bar in their public living spaces — for both function and form. They're a fun architectural feature to play up, and they often set the tone of a room, be it funky or elegant," she says. "In a Chicago three-flat, our client wanted to turn their plain, utilitarian living room into a multifunctional lounge for entertaining as well as everyday living. We turned two underused closets with cheap, ugly doors into the focal points of the room: a glamorous bar and a decorative bookcase that rolls away to expose the electrical panel."
by Lisa Wolfe Design, Ltd
Trends aren't confined to just living spaces, either. Mackie points to the growing demand for vessel tubs in bathrooms. "Who needs ugly tile decking around a drop-in tub when you can have a gorgeous compact vessel tub with air bath and chromatherapy features? This trend saves space while looking supersexy," she says.

Learn about colored bathroom lighting
by Inspired Interiors  
Finally, rooftops and outdoor spaces are a trend that will never die in Chicago. "We get more than our fair share of winter, so come springtime outdoor spaces are Chicago's most coveted real estate, and if you have a view of our world-class skyline, even better," Wolfe says. "Chicago rooftop culture is city living at its best. From our roofs we watch our baseball, cook our dinners in outdoor kitchens and watch the sunset over cocktails."

Next: More City Views
by Lisa Wolfe Design, Ltd

Comments

simps214 I love Chicago, both the city and the great homes there. The lovely greystones are especially breathtaking.

The only unappealing thing about my visits is the Victor/Victoria song that inevitably gets stuck in my head! :D
3 months ago ·
Retractable Screens, LLC Many Chicago high-rises and single family homes have beautiful city and Lake Michigan views. If possible, homeowners want to be able to have an outdoor space to relax and entertain, if not, they just like to be able to open their doors and windows without worrying about insects. Often homeowners do not want to ruin the design of their interior and exterior living space and therefore do not have any screens on their doors and windows.

Retractable door and window screens as well as retractable motorized screens are very popular for homeowners who do not want a screen that is visible all the time and that will block their beautiful views.

Retractable screens are the perfect solution as they are hidden in a low-profile housing and when needed, they simply pull out of their housing and latch in place allowing owners to enjoy fresh air.

They can be matched in color to the opening and provide insect and solar protection for the interior of the home. They can also be installed on the inside or outside of the home and blend in perfectly with any opening so they are barely visible from view.
3 months ago · ·
midmodfan I'd take the Miesian living room with the killer view. ;-)

Love the doors that cover the fridge and freezer in the black kitchen, the bookcase that hides the electric panel, the half-inserted shelfs in the bedroom. Lots of beautiful custom solutions.
3 months ago ·
franki7 "Inspired Interiors"....WOW!! franki
3 months ago ·
Chicago ReDesign Such inspiring designs. Awesome! As a Chicagoan myself I truly appreciate the talent in this amazing city. I also think one thing that sets us apart is that Chicagoans aren't so focused on keeping up with on-trend fads, but instead want interiors that reflect who they are and how they live. When you are stuck inside for so much of the year you need a space that really feels like home!
3 months ago ·
riconsd Timid no: Grounded yes. The coasts could learn from Chicago that high style can be livable.
3 months ago · ·
trioriet I grew up in NY and love my city, but the first time I was in Chicago...it really took my breath away. There is more space to actually enjoy the beautiful architecture of the high rises...we also have beautiful buildings but it seems more crowded sometimes get lost...
3 months ago · ·
leclairdecor Chicago is our next travel destination, I've heard wonderful things and can't wait to see the architecture!
3 months ago · ·
runowicki I love Chicago. I grew up within city limits and HATE it that I cant live there now. (WAAAYY TOO EXPENSIVE to live in a decent neighborhood and Cook County taxes are an abomination of evil politicians and failed Olympic bids). But what I miss most is the neighborhoods. They are so expressive and design lives in everything Chicagoans do. Our parkways are part of the introduction to our homes, the fences we erect are a nod to the history of the city, the window shapes and awnings reminiscent of the building boom around the World's fair. The front porches and the glass doorknobs left over from our grandparents, the bricks in our gardens stolen from the potholes in the streets, the string of buttons advertising the mayoral candidate and the Keith Haring Pop Shop that used to be on Michigan Avenue. The converted attics with no headroom and wonderfully built in shelving, windows that come in decent sizes and many of them (the house I grew up in had 42!), hand carved fireplace mantles, flower boxes hanging off every back deck filled with Impatients, Geraniums, and Phlox. Shopping at the original Crate and Barrel store on the North side as a child, where the floors were dirty and everything smelled like sawdust (wood shaving packing materials I guess). Every beautiful factory conversion near Elston, every rehab on North Racine, every kitchen gut in the Beverly historic district because there just aren't enough power outlets in them anymore, the simplicity of the rows of Bungalows around Portage Park and the grandeur of Hyde Park, the museums and on forever. This city is amazing and offers cross culture design at every turn.
3 months ago · ·
judi2237 We are remodeling our kitchen. We ordered a smallish island. it will be something like 2.78 ' x 5.25 '. We are trying to decide what lighting is needed. Would 2 hanging lights be sufficient or do you think we'd need 3?
3 months ago ·
Rebekah Zaveloff Privileged to work and live in this terrific city. Thanks for including our work in this Ideabook Becky! Oh, and Judy2237 - I'd say 2 is plenty
3 months ago ·
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