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828.469.6003
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info@flatspotdeckingservices.com
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749 AC Little Dr, Newton, 28658 NC
An outdoor event and lounge space on a sunny day. In the foreground, a wooden deck features an open, house-shaped timber frame structure, a barbecue grill, and a black wicker chair. In the background, there is an asphalt lot with patches of artificial grass, a white geodesic dome tent, string lights, dark modular container structures, and people relaxing at a table under a white umbrella.

The Outdoor “Living Room”. Designing Deck Spaces Guests Actually Use

A Deck Works Best When It’s Not an Afterthought 

Decks become valuable when they’re designed as a space, not just a base.

The 3 Zones Guests Love 

If you want guests to use the deck (and rave about it), think in zones:

  1. Arrival zone: step, shoes, hooks, small bench
  2. Lounge zone: two chairs + small table (the photo zone)
  3. Utility zone: cooler, firewood bin, stroller/gear space

Add-Ons That Increase Use (Without Feeling Fancy) 

  • a small privacy screen or railing corner
  • step lighting or path lighting
  • a covered edge (even partial)
  • a smooth, stable dining footprint 

Think About Flow 

Guests move from car → unit → deck → firepit → restroom. Deck placement that supports flow reduces complaints like “it was awkward” or “it felt exposed.” 

The most successful decks are designed around behavior, not just dimensions.