Photo: rarye via Flickr Creative Commons

As parents, we know the joy of IKEA: $5 stuffed animals, wooden toys that won’t break the bank, and cute kids’ decor galore. And that’s just the kid section. A study done by Priceonomics, though, says we’re gonna age out of the glory that is IKEA. According to the study, adults will outgrow IKEA, and its build-it-yourself furniture, by the time they’re 34 years old.

The credit and financing company Earnest recently analyzed a dataset of more than 10,000 American shoppers’ spending habits to see when they abandon IKEA for fancier home improvement and furniture stores.

According to its data, the prime IKEA years — a.k.a. the “IKEA decade” — run from the mid-20s to the early 30s. By their early to mid-thirties, people move on to Bed, Bath & Beyond, West Elm, Crate & Barrel, and Williams-Sonoma.

When folks are celebrating their fab forties, their favorite hangout spots include Home Depot, Pier 1 Imports, Restoration Hardware and Raymore & Flanigan. Lowes and Ashley Home Furniture is a great place for those in their fifties, as the peak customer age is 54.

Where do you like to get your home accessories and furniture? Let us know in the comments below!

There’s something ironic about a museum devoted to documenting a city’s progress getting booted out of its home in the name of progress.

Then again, the team at Seattle’s Museum of History & Industry (MOHAI) understands better than most that civic progress does not happen without demise and demolition.

Housed for the last 60 years in a Montlake building originally designed by Paul Thiry (principal architect of the 1962 World’s Fair), MOHAI has been forced to find a new home for its vast collection of regional artifacts due to the expansion of State Route 520; the Montlake facility will be razed to make room for additional traffic lanes.

This isn’t the first time SR 520 has come crashing through the MOHAI space. In 1962, just 10 years after the museum opened, the path of the then-brand-new floating bridge and highway forced MOHAI to muck up its original design, shuttering the stately southern entrance and improvising a door on the opposite side of the building.

You couldn’t blame museum staff members for wondering what SR 520 has against MOHAI, but instead, they see this year’s move to the former Naval Reserve Armory Building at South Lake Union as a tremendous opportunity (and not just because it’s a chance to get far away from SR 520). Ann Farrington joined MOHAI seven years ago as creative director of new museum design, having previously worked on the Experience Music Project, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and the Newseum in Washington D.C. She believes MOHAI’s “reinvention” offers a wealth of positives: “the blending of a national historic restoration with a dynamic exhibition space, the opportunity to revisit the unseen richness of the collection and use it to tell the stories of our region, and to bring the history as close to the present as a history museum can hope to achieve.”

To read more about MOHAI, click here for the full story.

This is our weekly guest post from our friends at Seattle Magazine, which keeps readers on the pulse of restaurants, personalities, arts, entertainment and culture that reflect the tapestry of our dynamic landscape. We’ve teamed up for an exciting partnership to bring you a weekly dose of fantastic Date Night ideas throughout greater Seattle.