{"product_id":"the-living-area-the-design-key-series","title":"The Living Area- The Design Key Series.","description":"\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eThe Design Key — The Living Area is a professional interior design course that teaches how to design the living room, dining room, home office, guest room, and any multipurpose space in a home as one coherent whole. It uses a function-first method: read how a household lives across the day, divide the space into working zones with or without walls, furnish for coexistence using smart and dual-use furniture, then finish and document the result to a professional standard. The course treats the apartment and the villa as one discipline at different scales, and covers everything from a small balcony to a generous terrace as an extension of the living space. It is six modules and thirty lessons with lifetime access, earning a Course Certificate toward The Design Key Master Programme.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eThe living area is the only room most homes cannot define by a single purpose. A kitchen cooks. A bathroom washes. The living area lives — and living, for most households, means doing many things in one place: gathering and retreating, eating and working, hosting friends on a Saturday and taking a video call on a Tuesday morning. The skill this course teaches is not decoration. It is designing for coexistence: making several functions share one space without any of them suffering for it.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eMost living-area failures are not failures of taste. They are rooms that were furnished before they were planned — arranged for a single magazine scene instead of a full day of real use. A sofa is placed, a television mounted, a table bought, and only later does anyone ask where the morning light falls, how people move through the room, or where the laptop will go when the working day begins. This course reverses that order. You begin with how the household actually lives, and you let function drive every decision that follows.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eThe method moves in a deliberate sequence. You survey the existing space — its light, structure, services, and access to any outdoor area. You build a living brief from the activities that must coexist and the way they shift across the day and week. You zone the space, dividing it into distinct areas for living, dining, working, and guests, using circulation, sightlines, levels, lighting, and furniture as dividers rather than always reaching for walls. You furnish for coexistence, getting scale and clearances right and resolving the modern home's hardest problem: embedding a genuine home office and an overnight guest into the room people live in, through smart, convertible, dual-use furniture that serves both jobs without compromising either. You carry a coherent material, light, and color story across every zone. And you document and present the result so a client and a contractor read it the same way.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eBecause the living area takes so many forms, the course is deliberately broad. It covers the living room, the combined living-and-dining room, the separate dining room, the dedicated guest room, the embedded home office, and the true flex room that shifts between guest, office, and hobby use. It is the course that catches every shared and multipurpose space the rest of the series does not — so that no room in the home is left without a method.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eIt also treats scale as a variable rather than a different problem. The same principles apply whether you are compressing every function into one apartment room or distributing them across a villa with rooms to spare; the apartment simply forces the dual-use thinking the villa can afford to relax. And it treats the balcony and the terrace as part of the room — extensions of the living space to be aligned, connected, and designed, not left over.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eBy the end, you can take any social or multipurpose space, at any scale, and design it as a coherent, livable whole — and document it to a standard you can hand to a client or a builder. The Living Area sits in the Rooms layer of The Design Key and earns a Course Certificate counting toward the Master Programme.\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp class=\"font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]\"\u003eSix modules. Thirty lessons. Lifetime access. One method you apply to every shared space that follows.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Craft'n Build","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":57517723713867,"sku":null,"price":687.5,"currency_code":"DKK","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0878\/9262\/3691\/files\/Living-room-course.jpg?v=1780674317","url":"https:\/\/craftnbuild.com\/en-dk\/products\/the-living-area-the-design-key-series","provider":"Craft'n Build","version":"1.0","type":"link"}