‘Flex spaces are one of the latest interior design trends in homebuilding,’ says real estate professional and broker, Theresa Raymond at Smoky Mountain Realty (opens in new tab). ‘The term refers to spaces that can be utilized to fit your lifestyle, a dedicated area meant to serve a certain purpose.’

What is flex space?

It can be an area that’s off or part of an entryway or landing, an under-used room upstairs or at the rear of a house, or even built into the floorplan, as new home developers are starting to do.   At Rose Hill, an Art-Deco inspired apartment tower in New York’s NoMad neighborhood, architects CetraRuddy are even adding purposeful ‘flex spaces’ meant to help the notoriously space-constrained New York City apartment grow with its occupants.  ‘The raw space can easily be converted into a nursery room, children’s playroom, home office, home school, or anything else the resident might need as they go through the stages of life,’ says CetraRuddy principal Ximena Rodriguez.

Good uses of flex space

A flex space is a space that is used for multiple purposes such as home office, home gym, library, toy room. Its use may change during the day/night and weekdays and weekends, but its purpose or purposes should be clearly defined with furniture and styling.  ‘Upstairs flex space tends to become a guest room, crafting room, or other dedicated-use room, while it’s much more likely to end up as storage space downstairs, especially in homes with insufficient foyer or mudroom space,’ says Leonard Ang, CEO of iPropertyManagement Leasing (opens in new tab), an online resource guide for landlords, tenants and real estate investors.

Cut the clutter

So, we know that any spare space in a home tends to get crowded with clutter. How to avoid turning your precious flex space into just another pile-up of laundry, household appliances and general junk? ‘When you’re looking at flex space you need to give it a clear purpose,’ says Brittany Mendez, CMO of vacation rental site The Florida Pandhandle (opens in new tab).  ‘Then you’ll know it’s not just another cluttered room because it’s geared towards functionalities that you need. For example, a workout room, a yoga room, home gym, a movie theater room and game room, a work and learning area and so on. These are all things that you consistently will use and won’t like if it’s cluttered.’