877 days ago

An interior designer shares the top 5 golden rules for bedroom design

Robert Anderson from Curtain Clean at Whakatane ChemDry

Bedrooms equal sleep. It follows that they should be a place of tranquility, somewhere to calm yourself after a day of sensory overload. Except it’s not always so cut and dried, particularly because many of us also use our bedroom as a refuge and place to be alone, a personal space in which to watch Netflix or even a study for an upcoming exam. So, follow your heart and create a bedroom that brings your dreams alive in the daytime as well as at night.
We would just say, pay attention to the mattress and the bed. Make sure they’re comfortable and, because they will undoubtedly be the focus of the room, choose your headboard and bedding with care. You will also need a degree of functionality about the room, so ensure that the wardrobe space is sufficient for your needs, that the curtains or blinds provide as much darkness as you need to sleep and that your lighting is suitably ambient but still good enough to allow you to read a book without eye strain.

1. Bedheads are essential
Whether you’re designing a child’s room or main bedroom, a feature bedhead is non-negotiable. It not only helps anchor the bed, but also makes the room feel complete. Think round, oblong, wall-to-wall, velvet, rattan, linen, custom-made timber – the options are endless. With lots of companies now making custom bedheads in New Zealand there are options to suit every room and taste. In a child’s room you can even use paint to create a bedhead – paint a shape on the wall behind the bed or paint the lower half of the room a different colour from the upper half.

2. Focus on lighting
Lighting is one of the most important accessories in any home and an easy way to create the wow factor – think of it like jewellery for a room. In bedrooms, pendant lights are ideal if the ceilings are high enough. In the main bedroom a pendant should be positioned above the foot of the bed, in the centre, so it’s out of the way of the room’s open space. Bedside lights can be used to create ambience at night. If you’re renovating or building, consider hanging a pendant or positioning a wall light above each bedside table. The light switch should line up vertically with the lights and sit 700mm from the floor so it’s higher than all bedside tables. Power points should also align with the lights, sitting just above the skirting board.

3. Always consider proportion
For a bedroom to work you need to think about proportion. Balance is created when all aspects of a room are in proportion with one another, so if your bed looks too big or your bedside tables look too small, they probably are. When you’re laying out your room, check the size of the bed – draw it on the wall or floor if you can. If your child’s bedroom is big, don’t push the single bed right into the corner. Leaving even a small amount of space (200mm) between the bed and an adjacent wall will allow you to make the bed more easily, as well as helping the room look in proportion, as your eye can drop behind the bed rather than hitting the wall and running up.

Keep reading: www.curtainclean.co.nz...

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🐾 Woof, woof! It's time to register your furry friend.

The Team from Whakatāne District Council

Your dog registration fees help make Whakatāne District dog-friendly by funding:
Owner education & safety programs 🏫
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...and much more!

🐕 Register your pooch or pay fees online at www.whakatane.govt.nz...

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1 day ago

⏰ Last chance Taupō District! ⏰

Darren Petry from Taupō District Council

Have you had your say on our Long-term Plan yet? Submissions close this Friday and we want to hear from you!
📣Have we got the balance right?
Should we focus most of our effort and money on essential services?
🚘 Safe roads
💧 Resilient water infrastructure
💡 Keeping the lights on
👉🏼 Find out more and let us know what you think here

📣Bag it or Bin it
Have your say on the future of kerbside rubbish and recycling!
Last year we asked what you thought of bags vs bins and heard from heeeeeaaaaaaaps of you.
So we’ve done some more mahi, worked out the details and crunched the numbers. Now we’re back asking the big question. Bag It or Bin It?
Check out the video here.
👉🏼 Find out more and have your say here.

📣Should we help ease the housing crisis in the Taupō District?
We own a parcel of land south of Richmond Heights in Taupō. We have the opportunity to sell some of this to a development partner who would build high-quality, attractive homes on it.
🏡 Some of these homes (around 42) would be targeted at first home buyers who can afford to pay a mortgage. The remainder would be sold on the open market.
👉🏼 Find out more and have your say here

📣How should we deal with wastewater?
Wastewater is the dirty water that's left behind after taking a shower, doing a load of washing or flushing the loo.
💧 In Taupō, there's been more houses being built on the northern side of the Waikato River. This means the pipe that takes wastewater across to the Taupō Wastewater Treatment Plant is almost at capacity.
💧 In Tūrangi, the wastewater is treated to a very high standard and disposed of into a wetland. This is a very common process in other parts of New Zealand but the community has raised concerns and asked us to try to find a land-based option.
👉🏼 We've come up with some different solutions. Check them out here.

📣Increasing fees and charges to manage rates
One way to try and keep rates under control is to increase our fees and charges on different services that people choose to use. We’re thinking of a 20-25 percent increase across the board.
📌 Adult AC Baths entry from $10 to $12
📌 Swim lessons from $12 to $15
📌 Rubbish bag stickers from $2 to $2.50
📌 Broadlands Road Landfill minimum charge from $21 to $26
📌 Building consent from $100 to $125
All of these services, like swimming pools and landfills, are topped up by rates. By putting up our fees and charges, it means that people who use the services contribute more towards the cost of providing them.
This helps reduce that cost burden falling on the wider community through rates (including the people who don’t use these facilities or services at all).
👉🏼 Find out more and have your say here.

📣Let’s talk about Control Gates Bridge
We’ve heard from many of you that you’re not enjoying sitting in traffic waiting to cross the Waikato River at certain times of the day.
🚗 Planning for a solution to ease congestion was meant to happen in 2031-33 but traffic volumes are increasing faster than we predicted. The plan is to spend the next three years working with Mercury, iwi, and hapū to begin working on options.
🌉 We’ll come back to you with some detailed designs and costs in 2027, with a view to starting construction in 2029. A rough initial estimated cost is $73.5 million. What do you think?
👉🏼 Find out more and have your say here.

📣Plan for Tūrangi town centre
We know the Tūrangi community are really keen to see their town centre tidied up and given a new lease on life, and there is also a lot of excitement about a community recreation centre in Tūrangi.
🏗️ During our last Long-term Plan in 2021, we started working with Ngāti Tūrangitukua to create a community recreation centre for Tūrangi. This centre is still in our draft Long-term Plan, but it has been delayed until 2028.
That’s because, although we allocated $15.9 million for the centre in our 2021-31 Long-term Plan, construction costs have risen significantly and there’s also uncertainty around where a centre should go, who would run it, and how it would be used. It is going to be expensive to build and operate and we aren’t confident the Tūrangi community can afford a centre of this size right now.
🎣 At the same time, the community has been asking for action on the Tūrangi town centre, and there are some links between getting this sorted and investing in a recreation centre.
So, what we’re proposing is that we do some town centre structure planning to get that functioning better, which will help us figure out what recreation facilities are needed and where best to place them.
In this plan, we’ve allocated around $150,000 to our town centre planning in 2025 and $17.5 million for the recreation centre project in the years 2028-2030. What do you think?
👉🏼 Find out more and have your say here.

📣Transport funding changes
We usually get help funding our transport projects like road widening from Waka Kotahi (New Zealand Transport Agency).
🚗 We’d like to improve some intersections in the next 10 years like AC Baths Avenue, Napier Road/Crown Road intersection and Taharepa Road/Crown Road intersection near Tauhara Primary School. We’d also like to do some major upgrades on Broadlands Road, Poihipi Road and Whangamata Road.
If we get less money, what should we do? Increase our budget to make up the shortfall so we can deliver the full list of projects? Or change the projects up to meet our smaller budget?
👉🏼 Find out more and have your say here.

📣Rates increase
Rachel lives in Taupō central, is passionate about living sustainably, yoga, her super cute cats and chooks, and the community. She is also one of our awesome councillors.
🏡 Rachel's looking at $4,079.97 in rates next year. That's an extra $450 from last year. Most ($415) of this increase is going towards targeted rates that pay for keeping our water and wastewater infrastructure up to scratch.
👉🏼 What's your number? Find out here.

📣Have we missed something?
We love how passionate our community is in the Taupō rohe. If there’s something that we’ve missed out that you think should be included in this plan, we really want to hear from you.
🙋🏼 Skip to question 11 of our submission survey and give your feedback or send an email to 10yearplan@taupo.govt.nz.
👉🏼 Find out more about making a submission here.

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