The Forgotten Art Of Back-Of-House Rooms In Modern Luxury Homes
There is a recurring issue in high-end residential design: homes that look exceptional but are frustrating to live in. Kitchens are beautifully minimal yet lack space for everyday appliances. Entrance halls are impressive but offer nowhere for coats or muddy boots. This raises a fundamental question: why do modern luxury homes lack practical storage when space is rarely the limitation?
The answer is a diminished focus on the ‘back of house’, the utility rooms, pantries, boot rooms and storage spaces that make a home work. In prioritising open-plan layouts and clean visual lines, practical design has too often been overlooked. The result is a home that functions more as a gallery than as a place designed for daily life.
How The ‘Showcase’ Home Compromised Everyday Utility
The emphasis on the ‘showcase’ home has pushed function into the background. Open-plan living creates light and connection, but often at the expense of spaces once dedicated to sculleries, larders and utility rooms. These have been replaced by uninterrupted layouts and handleless cabinetry that favour appearance over usability.
This is not a criticism of minimalism itself, but of treating it in isolation. When architecture and interiors are not developed alongside a clear understanding of how a client lives, function becomes secondary. Storage is then forced into leftover space, rather than shaping the layout from the outset.
What Defines ‘Back of House’ In A Modern Home?
Reintroducing functional design starts with redefining ‘back of house’. It is not about recreating traditional service wings, but about designing a network of practical, connected spaces that support the main living areas and reflect how the home is used.
At Rosewood Manor, this approach resulted in a purpose-designed ‘bootility’, a combined boot room and utility space positioned within the arrival sequence. Instead of treating these as separate additions, they were designed as a single, integrated zone: heated areas for drying coats and outdoor gear, durable stone flooring for wet conditions, and built-in seating with concealed storage, so you can take muddy boots off with ease. It works because it was planned from the beginning, not added later.
This thinking extended into the main living spaces. In the kitchen, a concealed breakfast bar was integrated into the cabinetry, available when needed and hidden when not, maintaining a clean aesthetic without losing functionality. In the living room, a fully concealed bar was built into the joinery, allowing the space to remain uncluttered while still supporting entertaining. Both required architectural and interior design decisions to be made together from the outset.
How An Integrated Design Approach Solves The Storage Problem
The breakdown of the traditional design process is a key reason these spaces fail. When architects and interior designers work sequentially rather than collaboratively, opportunities are missed. Storage and utility are often addressed too late, when meaningful changes are difficult or costly.
An integrated approach avoids this. By bringing architecture, interiors, landscape and project management together from the start, functional and aesthetic decisions are made simultaneously. The relationship between a kitchen and its pantry, or a hallway and its supporting storage, is resolved early in the design process.
This also allows overlooked spaces to be reconsidered. At our Rowfield project, a corridor originally treated as purely transitional was re-evaluated during early design stages. By reassessing its role, it was transformed into a walk-in pantry that now supports the kitchen’s daily use. The space itself was not new; the thinking behind it was. Because it was designed with intent, it feels consistent with the rest of the house in both quality and finish.
A similar approach can be seen at Larks Barn, where the pantry sits apart from the main kitchen for practical reasons, yet is no less considered in its design. Though very much a back-of-house space, its black and white tiled floor and bright yellow cabinetry give it a distinct character and sense of joy. By treating it with the same care as more visible rooms, it becomes not just functional, but a place that enhances the daily experience of the home.
This is the basis of our integrated turnkey service, where practical requirements and design vision develop together. Our architectural team plans layouts that clearly organise the home, while our interior designers ensure functional spaces are executed with the same level of detail as the principal rooms.
How Thoughtful Design Makes A Home Work Intuitively
A home’s quality is defined as much by how it works as by how it looks. The most successful homes support daily routines without effort, where everything has a place, and each activity has been considered.
It is the concealed bar that appears when needed. The pantry that was created from unused space. The functionality that allows a busy household to function without compromising the entrance experience.
By restoring focus to back of house design, homes become more than visually impressive, they become practical, efficient and straightforward to live in. The result is a considered, integrated environment that supports everyday life.
What’s Next?
Get inspired by our Interior Design Projects and Instagram page.
Whether you’re looking to transform an existing space or create an imaginative new build home or extension, our team can help you craft interiors that are uniquely tailored to your property and lifestyle.
Get in touch to get started.