In a multigenerational home, design choices can be emotional

This image shows a spice rack made with mason jars in a kitchen in Allison Park, Pa. When you live in a multigenerational house, deep-time design opportunities lurk around every corner. Opportunities to blend past and present abound. (AP Photo/Ted Anthony)

A Chinese rug purchased in Beijing in 1979 rests next to a Thai coffee table made from wood and a metal truck wheel bought in Bangkok in 2015. When you live in a multigenerational house, opportunities to blend past and present abound. (AP Photo/Ted Anthony)

A Thai wall hanging that has been displayed in the same spot since 1965 in the suburban Pittsburgh house built by Ted Anthony’s parents is surrounded by items that Anthony and his wife acquired in their own travels. When you live in a home passed down over generations, opportunities to blend past and present abound. (AP Photo/Ted Anthony)

ALLISON PARK, Pa. — Should the hanging from Thailand stay on the living-room wall where it has lived since I was born? Should we lay out the family room as it was when I was 8, when I was 17 or in a completely new configuration? Should we leave my mother’s spice rack on the north wall of the kitchen? What about the spices?