7 clever methods to take on a narrow living-room

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Narrow living-room concepts: for an initial take on integrated joinery, we like this home by Hugh Leslie, in which an especially narrow living-room has actually been jazzed up by a creative set of wood shelving. Here the shelving does not completely take control of the space, as there is a lot of area in between the top of it and the cornice, enabling the percentages of the architecture to sing.

Simon Brown

A narrow living-room is the practically unavoidable curse of the terraced townhouse, and constantly posture the very same issues. How do you cram in a flexible seating plan, exists space for a coffee table, and where do you put the television, if it is a television space? We'&#x 27; ve seen a lot of great concepts on our pages, a lot of which share the very same techniques: make clever usage of integrated in joinery (a more elegant method to house a television than merely installing it on the wall), think about a narrow ottoman instead of a coffee table (great for putting your feet up), and organize your seating in an L-shape, either with an L-shaped couch, or by putting the couch versus the long wall and chairs in the window. Keep scrolling for our preferred narrow living-room concepts from the archive.

The listed below space in Sophie Warburton'&#x 27; s London home is maybe the most common design to be discovered a terraced home, with a bay window at the front, a fireplace in the middle, and a long, narrow area in between. Sophie'&#x 27; s approach to it is a timeless one: a couch versus one wall, an ottoman in the middle, and armchairs both in the window and in the corner nearer the door. Racks on either side of the fireplace produce an apparent location to locate a tv.

Chris Horwood

The ‘middle space’ in a terraced home, i.e. the one in between the front sitting space and the normal cooking area extension at the back, is frequently difficult. Interior designer Polly Ashman has actually made the one in her west London home (listed below) into a narrow television space, with an internal window checking out the corridor. A complete wall of joinery maximizes the area, with a television housed in the middle, and a narrow ottoman is an excellent service rather of a coffee table. Due to the fact that this space is being utilized simply to view television, it doesn'&#x 27; t require a more friendly seating strategy.

Photos: Owen Wind, Styling: Rachel Moreve

Among our preferred narrow living-room concepts remains in this classy west London home by Lucy Hammond Giles of Sibyl Colefax & & John Fowler (listed below), where the wall of joinery has when again showed really beneficial. Lucy has actually utilized the owners' &#x 27; B&B Italia couch versus one wall, a narrow ottoman, and after that a vibrant wall of racks that supplies area for the television in addition to books and plants. Slim armchairs and an additional table inhabit completion of the space by the window. Among the factors this space feels glamorous instead of indicate is the scale of the art behind the couch. Lucy has actually utilized a big piece in the centre, surrounded by great deals of smaller sized pieces, which provides the space a strong centerpiece aside from the tv.

Michael Sinclair

Lonika Chande has actually done creative things with the living-room of this terraced home in Chelsea (listed below), constructing the joinery around the couch (in addition to on one side of the chimneybreast) for optimum storage and likewise a lot of fascinating colour. We rather like making use of a long mirror over the couch, which assists to produce a higher sensation of area.

Milo Brown

Designer Rachael Gowdridge has actually produced a cosy area in the snug of this Georgian townhouse in Clerkenwell, showing the oft-cited maxim that in a little area, it'&#x 27; s much better to over-scale your furnishings. Instead of attempting to pack in a couch on one wall and armchairs on the other, she has actually utilized the corner to produce a friendly plan with a large L-shaped couch. The other corner is filled with a shearling armchair by Jørgen Bækmark.

Christopher Horwood

The narrowness of the listed below space in Julia Barnard'&#x 27; s Somerset home presented issues for making it into a cosy library area. Julia has skillfully had actually the bookshelves developed into the wall to take advantage of the area, and likewise developed the Chilmark stone fire in, the flue of which becomes part of the back wall. The mantelpiece lines up precisely with the bookshelves. Julia’s upholsterer cut the middle out of 2 household couches that had actually seen much better days, making them into two-seater couches with matching camel backs. It'&#x 27; s an enjoyable option to the normal plan, in which the couch is always jammed up versus one wall.

Simon Brown
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