Skip to content
  • X

Subscribe

Magazine | Newsletters
  • Food & Drink
  • News
  • Culture
  • Style
  • Home
  • Family
  • Wellness
  • Things to Do
  • Travel
  • Best of NoVA
  • Best Restaurants
  • Most Influential
  • Top High Schools
  • In This Issue
  • Home
    • Home
  • From Chalkboards to WiFi, Play Spaces Fill Growing Needs
DIY Designs for your play room
  • Home

From Chalkboards to WiFi, Play Spaces Fill Growing Needs

For kids today, a dedicated playroom is the happy result of a number of factors. We get tips from local designers about how to create a great play space in your home.

By Editorial February 27, 2015 at 12:56 pm

DIY Designs for Play Rooms
Photo courtesy of Benjamin Moore.

By Jennifer Shapira

For kids today, a dedicated playroom is the happy result of a number of factors. But even if you’re looking to carve out a corner in the home’s shared space, local design experts say job one is figuring out how the area should function. After that, space restrictions, budget, ages of children and their constantly changing interests are the most important elements when creating such spaces.

Overall, a designer’s vision for the family’s playroom tends to blend old-school classics seamlessly with new-school innovations. Still, as trends change, the purpose remains the same: to learn and to play.

DIY Designs for your play room
Photo courtesy of Benjamin Moore.

“What I really like to do with playrooms is create spaces where kids can foster their creativity,” says designer Suzanne Price. Case in point: the popular application of chalkboard paint. Price says kids never grow out of wanting to scrawl on chalkboards. From practicing ABCs to creating to-do lists, the chalkboard’s purpose changes over the years, but the draw is permanent.

Paint it on a playroom wall, and “you could have several kids down there just going to town and drawing on the walls, and it’s OK. They love that,” says Price. “They can play school when they get a little older, and when they’re younger, they just kind of scribble around.”

Price offers this tip for framing the chalkboard: Consider a piece of fluted molding that performs double duty as both a chalk dust catchall and a mini shelf for the chalk itself. Choose magnetic chalkboard paint for an instant gallery wall fit for displaying the kids’ artwork.

In play areas, storage is also key. Labels serve as guides for older children, but for younger ones, designate baskets or bins for like items: stuffed animals in one, Legos in another, arts and crafts supplies in another.

A basic system teaches children about order, which can be important if the play area is a shared family space where toys might need to be stored out of sight by bedtime.

“People should think carefully about the organization part of it so that kids can be involved in the putting away of their toys in a way that’s possible for them, even when they’re little,” says designer Kathleen Soloway. “I think it encourages an important habit.”

For a flexible workspace, Price favors the Container Store’s versatile Elfa wall system, which can see a child through from coloring books to textbooks. “All of the heights of the surfaces are adjustable, so it can grow with the kids,” she says. “You can just rearrange and readjust the whole unit to be something different.”

Something else kids never outgrow: the floor. It serves as a necessary crash pad for toddlers and later turns into a spot to spread out, to play and to create. A word of caution thanks to a common experience: Price suggests a soft, low-pile carpet so that Legos or Barbie shoes don’t disappear, later to be found by an angry adult’s bare foot.

As the child grows and transitions from playroom to a pre-teen or teen hangout, it’s a given that the zone, like the rest of the home, is WiFi-enabled. And that should be a comfort to parents. As teens shoot pool, play Ping-Pong or settle into portable beanbag chairs to stream movies or play video games, Price says parents are investing in making “cool hangout spaces” into safe places so they can track their whereabouts. “It’s a safe place where we know where they are,” she says.

And who could argue with that?

 

<< BACK TO THE KIDS ISSUE

(March 2015)

Trending in NoVA

See What’s New and Opening Soon at Tysons Corner Center

The 19 Best June Events in Northern Virginia and Washington, DC

Best of NoVA 2026: The 150+ Best Places to Eat, Shop, and Play in Northern Virginia

19 New Northern Virginia Restaurants Offering Fresh Flavors

8 June Festivals in Northern Virginia to Add to Your Calendar

things to do newsletter

Our Top Stories In Your Inbox

Our newsletters delivered weekly.

Subscribe

Feeds

RSS Feed Follow in Feedly

You May Also Like

Bright and floral kitchen interior of Merchant family home in Alexandria

A 1970s Alexandria Home Gets a Remodel for Improved Form and Function

A bedroom that was decorated by a Wider Circle's Home Reimagined makeover event

Home Makeover Event Furnishes 50 Apartments for DMV Residents in Need

Room with green wallpaper and antique furniture

NoVA Interior Designers Share Tips for Decorating with Antiques

  • X

Company

  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Writer’s Guidelines
  • Internships
  • Terms of Use

Magazine

  • Magazine
  • Subscription
  • Newsletter
  • Back Issues

Talk to Us

  • Contact Us
  • Submit an Event
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram

Shopping

  • Subscription
  • Back Issues
  • Plaques
  • Realtor Client Gift Subscriptions

On Newsstands Now

June 2026 best of nova cover

Copyright © 2026 Northern Virginia Magazine

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Hey AI.