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Home Organization Blueprint

作者 haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ 安全检测通过
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在 OpenClaw 中安装
/install home-organization-blueprint
功能描述
Design a personalized home organization system that fits your space, habits, and family needs. Zone-based, behavior-driven, sustainable.
使用说明 (SKILL.md)

Home Organization Blueprint

Why This Skill Exists

Target pain: You feel overwhelmed by clutter. You have tried organizing before — watched videos, bought containers, spent a weekend "fixing everything" — but the system never sticks. Within two weeks, things drift back to chaos.

Why generic advice fails: Most organization content is aesthetic-driven ("make it look like a magazine") rather than behavior-driven ("make it work with how you actually live"). It tells you where things should go without understanding your actual traffic patterns, habits, or family dynamics. It treats organization as a one-time event, not a system.

How this skill is different: Instead of giving you a checklist, this skill acts as a design partner. It guides you through a room-by-room behavioral audit, then co-creates a zone-based system mapped to your real life. The output is not a photo-ready room — it is a living reference document (Storage Assignment Matrix) your whole household can use.

Why users reuse it: The Maintenance Schedule (daily/weekly/monthly/quarterly/seasonal) turns the blueprint into a recurring reference. Life changes — kids grow, seasons shift, work goes remote. The system adapts because the framework is yours, not a one-size-fits-all prescription.

Purpose

Most home organization fails because it is aesthetic-driven ("look like a magazine") rather than behavior-driven ("work with how you actually live"). This skill helps you design a personalized home organization system based on real traffic patterns and daily habits — not aspirational photos. The result is a system that sticks because it is built around your actual life.

When to Use This Skill

Use this skill when:

  • You feel overwhelmed by clutter and don't know where to start organizing.
  • You have tried organizing before but the system didn't stick.
  • You are moving into a new home or rearranging rooms.
  • You want a systematic approach to home organization instead of ad-hoc tidying.
  • Multiple family members share spaces and need a shared organizational logic.

Do not use this skill to:

  • Get one-time cleaning instructions (this is a system design, not a cleaning guide).
  • Receive psychological or therapeutic support for hoarding behaviors.
  • Plan structural renovations or built-in installations.
  • Replace professional organizing services for extreme situations.

What You'll Need

Before starting, have ready:

  • A mental map of each room in your home (or walk through while talking).
  • Knowledge of your household composition (number of people, ages, pets).
  • Awareness of daily routines and traffic patterns.
  • Storage constraints (closets, cabinets, shelves, available wall space).
  • Personal preferences: what does "organized" look and feel like to you?

The Home Organization Blueprint Workflow

Phase 1: Home Assessment (Conversation)

The assistant will guide you through a room-by-room audit. For each room or area, answer:

  1. What happens here? List all activities (eating, working, playing, sleeping, storage, hobbies).
  2. Who uses this space? Identify all people and their patterns.
  3. What friction do you feel? Where do things pile up? What is hard to find? What annoys you daily?
  4. What is currently working? Honor the parts of your home that already flow well.
  5. What are your constraints? Limited storage, rental restrictions, mobility needs, budget.

The assistant will help you notice patterns you may miss: the chair that collects clothes, the counter that collects mail, the drawer no one opens.

Phase 2: Zone Design

Based on the assessment, the assistant will help you design functional zones. A zone is a functional area that may span multiple rooms or be a sub-section of one room.

Zone design principles:

  • Activity-based, not object-based. A "coffee zone" has mugs, beans, grinder, filters — all in one place, even if that means moving items from their "logical" room.
  • Frequency-of-use layering. Daily items at arm's reach. Weekly items in cabinets. Monthly items in higher shelves. Seasonal items in deep storage.
  • Natural path alignment. Items are stored where you naturally look for them, not where they "should" go.
  • Containment by category. All papers in one zone. All craft supplies in one zone. Avoid the "office supplies in three different rooms" trap.

Example zones to consider:

Zone Typical Contents Best Location
Entry Drop Zone Keys, mail, bags, shoes, masks Near most-used entrance
Command Center Calendar, bills, school papers, stamps Kitchen or hallway, visible
Meal Prep Zone Pots, pans, utensils, spices, oils Near stove and sink
Relaxation Zone Books, blankets, remotes, headphones Living room corner
Work/Study Zone Computer, chargers, notebooks, office supplies Dedicated desk or table
Kids Activity Zone Toys, art supplies, books Near where kids naturally play
Pet Zone Food, leash, treats, toys, meds Near door or feeding area

Phase 3: Traffic Flow & Accessibility Map

For each zone, the assistant will help you think about:

  • Primary paths: The routes people walk through the home most often. Zones should not block these paths.
  • Secondary paths: Less frequent routes. Temporary items (laundry basket, project-in-progress) can live here.
  • Dead zones: Corners, behind doors, under stairs. Opportunities for storage but not for active-use items.
  • Accessibility: If anyone in the household has mobility constraints, high-frequency items must be reachable.

Phase 4: Storage Assignment Matrix

The assistant will help you create a clear assignment:

Item Category Zone Assigned Storage Location Container Type Frequency
Mail & Bills Command Center Desktop tray Open tray Daily
Winter Coats Entry Drop Zone Hall closet Hooks + hangers Seasonal
Board Games Relaxation Zone TV cabinet Stackable bins Monthly

This matrix becomes your household reference document. When anyone asks "where does this go?", the matrix has the answer.

Phase 5: Daily Reset Routines

The most important part of any organization system is maintenance. The assistant will help you design 5-minute reset rituals for each zone:

Template for a zone reset routine:

  1. Scan (30 seconds): Walk through the zone. What's out of place?
  2. Return (2 minutes): Put misplaced items back to their assigned homes.
  3. Tidy (2 minutes): Straighten, close drawers, fluff pillows.
  4. Note (30 seconds): Anything broken, empty, or needing attention? Add to a running list.

Phase 6: Family Agreements

If multiple people share the home, the system needs buy-in. The assistant will help you draft simple family agreements:

  • "Return to home" rule: Every item has a home. After using something, it returns there.
  • "One in, one out" for shared spaces: Adding something new means removing something old.
  • "Evening sweep": Everyone does a 5-minute reset of their personal items before bed.
  • "Label everything" (optional): Labels reduce the "where does this go?" friction for everyone.

Phase 7: Maintenance Schedule

Organization decays without check-ins. The assistant will help you set a maintenance rhythm:

Cadence Action
Daily 5-minute zone resets
Weekly Review during Weekly Home Review (see weekly-home-review skill)
Monthly 15-minute zone audit: is the system still working?
Quarterly Re-assign zones if life has changed
Seasonally Deep declutter with seasonal-declutter-framework

Output Template

When the workflow is complete, the assistant will deliver:

## Home Organization Blueprint — [Your Name / Date]

### Home Assessment Summary
[Pain points, patterns, constraints identified]

### Zone-by-Zone Plan
[Zone Name]: [Function] — [Location] — [Key Contents] — [Daily Reset Routine]

### Traffic Flow Notes
[Primary paths, adjusted placements, accessibility notes]

### Storage Assignment Matrix
[Item → Zone → Container → Frequency table]

### Family Agreements
[Agreed-upon rules for maintaining the system]

### Maintenance Schedule
[Daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, seasonal check-in plan]

Tips & Variations

For studio apartments: Zones overlap in one room. Use visual boundaries (rugs, shelving, lighting) to define each zone's territory. Vertical storage is your friend.

For families with young children: Zones at their height. Toy bins on the floor, not shelves. Labels with pictures, not words. Expect imperfect maintenance — the system's job is to make cleanup fast, not to prevent mess.

For shared housing/roommates: Each person gets a clearly defined territory. Shared zones need explicit agreements. Label everything.

For accessibility needs: All daily-use items within reach range. No bending or stretching for frequently used items. Clear floor paths for mobility aids.

For mixed-use spaces: One room serving multiple functions (home office + guest room + craft space). Define zones within the room using furniture placement and storage assignments. Each function gets its own storage, even if they share a wall.

Related Skills

  • seasonal-declutter-framework — The maintenance counterpart for keeping stuff flowing out of the system.
  • kitchen-workflow-optimizer — Applies zone design specifically to the highest-traffic room.
  • storage-maximizer — Finds hidden storage capacity when your blueprint needs more room. This skill says what goes where; storage-maximizer says how to find space when there isn't any.
  • weekly-home-review — The weekly check-in ritual where you review whether zones are working.

Safety Notes

  • Do not discard items you are emotionally attached to without taking time to decide. Organization is about systems, not minimalism.
  • Do not make structural changes to your home (renovations, built-ins) based on these suggestions — work within your existing space.
  • Store heavy items below shoulder height. Never block vents, electrical panels, or emergency exits.
  • Organizational systems are deeply personal. What works for one household may not work for another. Adapt freely.
  • If clutter is causing significant distress or impacting daily functioning, consider consulting a professional organizer or mental health professional. This skill provides frameworks, not therapy.
安全使用建议
This appears safe to use as an instruction-only planning aid. Keep sensitive details general: avoid exact addresses, alarm/camera locations, lock habits, children’s schedules, or anything you would not want stored in a chat or shared document. The provided SKILL.md artifact was truncated, so this review is based on the visible content plus metadata and scan signals.
功能分析
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: home-organization-blueprint Version: 1.0.0 The 'home-organization-blueprint' skill bundle is a document-only framework designed to guide an AI agent through a home organization workflow. It contains no executable code, scripts, or API requirements as verified in skill.json and SKILL.md. The instructions are purely conversational and focused on space planning and habit-based organization, with no evidence of prompt injection, data exfiltration, or malicious intent.
能力评估
Purpose & Capability
The purpose and visible workflow are coherent and non-executable, but the skill naturally asks for personal household context such as room use, family composition, and routines.
Instruction Scope
The visible instructions are conversational planning guidance for home organization and do not direct tool use, account access, code execution, or hidden actions.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec, no required binaries, no environment variables, no API requirement, and skill.json declares document-only content with hasExecutableCode false.
Credentials
The requested environment access is proportionate: no files, network, credentials, local system access, or OS-specific behavior are declared.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill describes producing a reusable Storage Assignment Matrix and maintenance schedule, but there is no evidence of background persistence, elevated privileges, or autonomous operation.
如何使用
  1. 确保已安装 OpenClaw(本地或 Docker 部署)
  2. 在对话框中输入安装命令:/install home-organization-blueprint
  3. 安装完成后,直接呼叫该 Skill 的名称或使用 /home-organization-blueprint 触发
  4. 根据 Skill 的参数说明提供必要输入,即可获得结构化输出
版本历史
v1.0.0
Home Organization Blueprint 1.0.0 - Initial release introducing a step-by-step, behavior-driven home organization framework. - Guides users through room assessment, zone design, traffic flow mapping, storage assignment, and creating reset routines. - Includes tools such as a Storage Assignment Matrix and customizable Maintenance Schedule. - Focuses on sustainable systems adaptable to changing household needs, not one-size-fits-all solutions. - Designed to support multiple users in shared spaces and emphasizes ongoing usability over aesthetics.
元数据
Slug home-organization-blueprint
版本 1.0.0
许可证 MIT-0
累计安装 0
当前安装数 0
历史版本数 1
常见问题

Home Organization Blueprint 是什么?

Design a personalized home organization system that fits your space, habits, and family needs. Zone-based, behavior-driven, sustainable. 它是一个面向 Claude Code / OpenClaw 的 AI Agent Skill 插件,目前累计下载 32 次。

如何安装 Home Organization Blueprint?

在 OpenClaw 或 Claude Code 对话框中运行命令「/install home-organization-blueprint」即可一键安装,无需额外配置。

Home Organization Blueprint 是免费的吗?

是的,Home Organization Blueprint 完全免费,采用 MIT-0 许可证,可自由下载、安装和使用。

Home Organization Blueprint 支持哪些平台?

Home Organization Blueprint 跨平台运行,可在任意部署了 OpenClaw / Claude Code 的环境中使用(cross-platform)。

谁开发了 Home Organization Blueprint?

由 haidong(@harrylabsj)开发并维护,当前版本 v1.0.0。

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