A little basic knowledge of interior decorating and area management are the main keys to achieving the spaciousness that you want. Before you sit down to chalk out the apartment storage ideas for small spaces, you must know all the factors that count in space management.
Keep These In Mind While Deciding Apartment Storage Ideas For Small Spaces:
- Light and pastel wall colors give the sense of continuity of space.
- Carpet your floors in the same shade as the wall color.
- Vertically striped curtains make a low ceiling look higher.
- Hang a mirror opposite a window that reflects the light from outside, making the room feel more airy and larger.
- Sofa-cum-beds are a wise investment to make.
- Floating shelves are yet another miracle worker that store articles without taking up much ground space.
Storage Ideas For Small Spaces
When space is at a premium, it might seem as if storage solutions would only appear with the help of magic (assuming you don't want to get rid of all your belongings, that is). However, no wands or wizards are required owing to the tiny house movement—storage options for compact spaces are more plentiful than ever. Yes, some need the services of a handyman—the impact of a well-built built-in cannot be overstated—but others are as simple as rearranging your furniture. We've compiled a list of some clever and versatile apartment storage ideas for small space.
Jump to:
- 1. Shelf Separators
- 2. Folding Desk
- 3. Seating that is mounted on the wall
- 4. Storage on the Kitchen Island
- 5. Bike Rack on the Wall
- 6. Butcher Block (attached)
- 7. Wall of Pegs
- 8. Seating in Banquette
- 9. Furniture That Can Be Converted
- 10. Storage Under the Stairs
- 11. Table for the Entrance
- 12. Storage-on-Storage
- 13. Nooks with Built-Ins
- 14. Baskets, Baskets, and More Baskets
1. Shelf Separators
If you live in a studio, you may be looking for creative methods to separate the sleeping "room" from the living "room" without erecting a wall. While you're breaking things up, stacking crates, or even floating an open shelf unit can offer you additional storage space.
2. Folding Desk
It would be insane to contemplate putting a full-size desk in many tiny spaces. However, you can't write that book in bed (well, you could, but it'd be good to sit in a chair every now and then), so either tuck a stool under a console table or get a fold-down desk to attach to the wall.
3. Seating that is mounted on the wall
Install a floating bench-shelf low along a wall if your lease or budget allows it, or have one made from an affordable material like plywood and installed as BY Architects did in the room below. Seating that doesn't take up too much room on the floor? Check.
4. Storage on the Kitchen Island
Put your excess dishes and other gadgets you bought during your celery juice period in the kitchen island cabinets. Never again will you be stumped as to where to put your holiday placemats.
5. Bike Rack on the Wall
Screw some vinyl-coated c-hooks into a joist and loop the rear tires over them, or go big with a clever pulley system that drags them up out of sight, as Tribe Studio did in the house depicted below.
6. Butcher Block (attached)
Due to a lack of counter space, you're not feeling motivated to cook. We despise it just as much as you do when your materials fall to the ground due to a lack of room. However, there is a solution: For that much-needed additional room, add a butcher block. Choose one with a variety of levels (or DIY this and create your own mini shelving unit).
7. Wall of Pegs
Consider a pegboard wall, such as this vibrant peachy one by Position Collective, for simple rearranging, nice aesthetics, and plenty of flexible storage.
8. Seating in Banquette
Build a bench in that unused kitchen corner, top it with a unique cushion, and you'll just need a round table and two tiny chairs to make it seem like a true dining area—just make sure it's the sort of bench that opens from the top to maximize storage.
9. Furniture That Can Be Converted
Consider incorporating furnishings that can easily be converted to another purpose instead of single-use items. Depending on how you arrange it, a drop-leaf table may serve as a console, a workstation, or a full-fledged dining room table. Two consoles may be rotated to stand back-to-back providing bar-height table seating when placed side by side.
10. Storage Under the Stairs
Yes, you may go for opulent built-ins or just be creative with how you arrange furniture in that unused area under the stairs. (Please, no closet bedrooms beneath the stairs.)
11. Table for the Entrance
An entrance table may be used for more than just storing your keys. Books, artwork, keepsakes, and even the clothing you can't part with may all be stored in a suitable console. A beautifully arranged and useful entrance table shouts "welcome home."
Likewise, consider adding a raised platform to a room (or part of a room if you live in a loft or studio) and you'll be able to store all sorts of stuff on it: bags, winter coats, or even an additional mattress for when unexpected visitors show up on your doorway.
12. Storage-on-Storage
There's nothing like stacking storage with, you guessed it, additional storage to make you happy. To improve your organizing, add jars or tiny baskets to your bookshelf or shelving unit.
13. Nooks with Built-Ins
Make the most of your nooks to maximize storage space. Include a small desk space that satisfies all of your work-from-home requirements, or just add some additional sitting in the form of an armchair.
14. Baskets, Baskets, and More Baskets
Oh, how we like a well-made basket. It really is unrivaled. Anything (within reason, friends) you don't want your visitors to see may be tucked away. With a throw on top of your basket, no one will see that all of your takeout menus are jumbled in there.
These innovative apartment storage ideas for small spaces will help you a lot in setting up your flat and making it space-efficient.
Images Source: instagram.com