If you’re expecting a big crowd for Thanksgiving, you’ll need a flexible space that can accommodate everyone. Here’s how to design it.
With the holidays approaching, have you thought about how you’ll accommodate all of your guests when they come for dinner? If you’re expecting a big crowd, a small table with four chairs won’t cut it — unless you’re OK with asking people to stand while they eat. But, if you have enough space for a monstrous table capable of seating more than a dozen people, it can feel disconcertingly large and lonely the rest of the year. The best solution for a dining space that works for dinners big and small? Design it with flexibility in mind, by considering how the seating options can expand and contract.
“So many times, my clients say, ‘Oh, you have to do the dining room so it can sit 16 people,’” said Vicente Wolf, an interior designer in New York. “My first question is always, ‘How often do you need that?’ Why spend the money, take up the space and create this environment where you look in and it’s never inviting for dinner on a daily basis?” Instead, Mr. Wolf uses tables that can grow or be repositioned, and helps his clients plan creative seating options when friends and families come over. The goal is to make a dining space that can comfortably hold a big group but is inviting enough to use every day. He and other interior and event designers shared advice on how to do that.
Plan the Table(s)
Unless you live in a castle, a boardroom-size dining table probably doesn’t make a lot of sense. One time-tested solution to the challenge of entertaining groups of various sizes is to use an expandable table with multiple leaves that allow the length to be changed as needed. But that isn’t the only option. Mr. Wolf sometimes furnishes dining rooms with a pair of identical square tables on casters. Most of the time, they are pushed together to form a reasonably sized rectangular dining surface. But when many guests are coming, the tables can be pulled apart to provide additional space for more chairs. “All of a sudden, it sits 16,” he said, “because you can have two people on every side.”
For a Manhattan loft, he used a different approach, placing a drop-leaf table in a television nook near the dining area. When the leaves are down, the table serves as a place to have casual meals or drinks in the front of the TV; when multiple guests are expected, it can be carried out to the dining area and opened up as a second dining table.