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Understairs storage cupboards/Boxroom cupboards

  • 03-02-2017 6:04pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 3,601 ✭✭✭


    Im looking to get an idea on cost for understairs storage, but Im tempted to have a go at it myself, Im handy enough, but I prefer pre made items as they can look a lot tidier, is it possible to get off the shelf cupboard drawers for this purpose with a 45 degree cut on them?

    Also, Im weighing the options of what to do with my boxroom, I want to turn it into a study/office, but I dont really want to write it off as a guest bedroom, I looked into a horizontal murphy bed fittings and again Id prefer doctor an ikea bed as it will have a tidier pre-made look, with the view to have it fold up, with a table underneath folding out as the bed is closed, Ive come across a bit online, but its mainly the fittings Id need to acquire, hinges, springs and gas struts.

    The boxroom is quite small and it has a 45 degree slope where the stairs underneat protrudes into the bedroom, but Im tempted to try fit it all in.

    Has anyone come across any good suppliers in Ireland for items for these purposes?


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,374 ✭✭✭J.R.


    These were on Dragon's Den

    http://smartstorage.ie/ie/


    scroll down through the site page to see various solutions & combinations.

    They also have a shop where you can buy flat-pack items etc.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,601 ✭✭✭cerastes


    J.R. wrote: »
    These were on Dragon's Den

    http://smartstorage.ie/ie/


    scroll down through the site page to see various solutions & combinations.

    They also have a shop where you can buy flat-pack items etc.

    I saw a van with that number on in a carpark before Xmas, took a pic on my phone but realised later that I didn't get the whole number, just compared the last digits in my pic and this is the same place, thanks.
    I must find their shop and have a look too.

    Any takers on the office/bedroom options anyone? Or buying hinges and fittings for diy of a Murphy bed, without the proper fittings it just wouldn't be a runner or a matter of buying something online.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,645 ✭✭✭✭The Princess Bride


    http://bmcustomfurniture.ie/

    These have well priced, custom built furniture.
    Very professional and friendly to deal with it also which is a plus.
    Have a look at website for beds/presses built to fit awkward areas.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,344 ✭✭✭Thoie


    cerastes wrote: »
    Any takers on the office/bedroom options anyone? Or buying hinges and fittings for diy of a Murphy bed, without the proper fittings it just wouldn't be a runner or a matter of buying something online.

    It used be common to have a "bunk bed" built in to box rooms over the slope of an upcoming stairs. This wasn't two beds above each other, but a plain built in single. If a single bed would suffice in the spare room, how about mounting a pull down and out "shelf" that could go up high enough over the bed if someone was sleeping in it, but normally stay down as a desk the rest of the time. The pull down fittings could be those from kitchen "pull down shelf" things. You might want to add some hinged legs for extra support at the front if you tend to lean on your desk.

    It depends on how often you'd expect to have visitors. I'm going to have a small bedroom as an office in the next few months, and while it doesn't have the stair slope, I plan on getting a sofa bed in there with a smallish desk. I suspect that I'll have to shift the desk to one side in order to turn the sofa into a bed, but I also estimate that room will be used maybe twice a year for visitors, so I can put up with a bit of furniture moving that rarely. If you'll have visitors every few weeks, that becomes more of a PITA.

    I did a lot of looking into pull down beds, and even doing it yourself they seem very expensive, particularly when it's for such occasional use.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,601 ✭✭✭cerastes


    I didn't think of doing a fold down table/desk, not a bad idea but I think the desk would be too wide and you wouldn't easily/comfortably be able to get your feet under the desk. I'm thinking of drawing up a design using some flat pack fixed storage from somewhere I can get the same style/design/colour like Ikea, fit some wardrobes and use the existing desk for now.

    I made an enquiry off a place but the design they made had a large dead space and the room is too small to waste any, plus it's not really what I'm looking for.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,344 ✭✭✭Thoie


    cerastes wrote: »
    I didn't think of doing a fold down table/desk, not a bad idea but I think the desk would be too wide and you wouldn't easily/comfortably be able to get your feet under the desk. I'm thinking of drawing up a design using some flat pack fixed storage from somewhere I can get the same style/design/colour like Ikea, fit some wardrobes and use the existing desk for now.

    I made an enquiry off a place but the design they made had a large dead space and the room is too small to waste any, plus it's not really what I'm looking for.

    You need the desk to come down and pull forward towards you to allow you to be able to sit properly at it. You don't need to make the desk as deep as the entire bed - a small lip along the back would stop things falling off onto the bed, and it doesn't have to be the entire width of the bed either - if it doesn't bother you, being able to see half a bed isn't a big deal. My current set up is a desk between a spare bed and a wall. I keep the spare bed covered in a big, plain, fleece blanket to stop it getting dirty when not in use. I have a tendency to put letters and things on it.

    Another option, again depending on how often the guest room is used, is to buy one of those fancy, high, self inflating mattresses - something like this:

    http://www.aerobed-europe.com/uk/p-26315-platinum-raised-airbed-double.aspx

    They're as high as a divan, so you're not asking granny to sleep on the floor. And they take standard size sheets etc.


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