It is said that the kitchen is gold and the bathroom is silver, but in fact the entrance is as important as the kitchen and bathroom. Especially when the epidemic is severe, the entrance hall must not only store shoes, umbrellas, keys, bags and other personal items, but also have the functions of isolation coats and cleaning and disinfection.
Without an efficient entrance, your mood becomes bad when you go out or come home. Every time you open the shoe cabinet, it smells bad or a shoe falls out. You can’t find your keys when you go out. There are piles around the entrance. Express boxes...it really gives me a headache just thinking about it.
Today, the Sugar Factory Editorial Department presents to you 40 wonderful entrance halls, which can satisfy both storage and appearance.
The entrance hall is actually a quasi-indoor space. It neither belongs to the outdoors nor can it be classified as indoors. When we go indoors from the outdoors, there is often dust on our shoes, which will fall to the entrance floor when we take off and change our shoes.
Imagine that if the entrance hall is flush with the indoor floor, the dust will further float into the room and pollute the indoor floor. Therefore, in Japan, by raising the indoor floor by 10 centimeters and allowing the entrance to sink relatively, it can prevent most of the sand and dust from blowing up and entering the room.
Another detail here is that entrances are often paved with floor tiles, because the floor tiles are durable, waterproof, and highly practical.
Women's long shoes and children's shoes are not easy to wear. If there is a chair next to you, you will not rock around and lose your center of gravity. However, the entrance hall is generally small and a small stool will take up space. In Japanese homes, you can sit on the steps to change shoes, and it also functions as a chair.