Rooms that fit how Canadians actually live.
Furniture arrangement and room ergonomics shape comfort more than any single object. These pages cover circulation, seating posture, reach distances, and the seasonal habits that affect Canadian homes from Vancouver condos to Prairie bungalows.
A living room arranged around natural light and clear walking paths. Photo via Wikimedia Commons.
Three things every room layout has to resolve.
Ergonomics in the home is less about expensive furniture and more about distances, angles, and the way people move between tasks. These principles apply across apartment and detached-house layouts.
Keep walking paths clear
Main routes through a room generally need roughly 90 cm of clearance so two people can pass. Furniture pushed too far into a path forces detours and bruised shins.
Match seating to the task
A sofa sized for relaxing is the wrong height for a laptop. Separating lounge seating from task seating reduces slouching and shoulder strain during long sessions.
Place things within easy reach
Side tables, switches, and outlets within arm's length cut the small repeated movements that wear on the body. Daylight placement matters more in Canada's short winter days.
Recent reading.
Detailed write-ups on layout decisions, each built around a specific room type and the constraints common to Canadian housing.
Questions or corrections?
Send a note about an article, a layout question, or a factual correction. Editorial address: Ottawa, Ontario. Reach the desk by email at contact@betterlivingco.org.
- Editorial: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
- Email: contact@betterlivingco.org
- Topics: room ergonomics, furniture arrangement