Ideas small spaces


32 Small House Interior Design Ideas

When you live in a small house or apartment, fitting in everything you need is difficult. Trying to fit everything and make it look good is an even bigger challenge, but that's what makes small space design so fun: Coming up with clever solutions to those obstacles makes it all the more rewarding in the end. Luckily for you, we've got quite a few small space tricks up our sleeves, with hacks ranging from hanging beds to hidden storage, tricks of the eye, and more. Whether you live in a studio apartment or want to get more out of a tiny room in a small house, these small space design ideas will make it feel so much larger while maintaining style.

1

Incorpoate Reflective Materials

Rustic White Photography

Opt for white lacquered walls and glossy tiles, as designer Brian Patrick Flynn did here. The high-shine materials are reflective and will generate the same maximizing effect that a mirror will, bouncing light and making for a generally airer space.

SHOP TILES Zellige Tiles, $2

2

Opt for Pocket Doors

House Beautiful

Pocket doors with glass windows allow for shared light to flow throughout the space while also creating separation. And even better, they slide right into the wall when not being used, taking up much less space than swinging doors.

SHOP DOORS IKEA Sliding Doors, $180

3

Add a Gallery Wall

TREVOR PARKER PHOTOGRAPHY

Though it may sound counterintuitive, covering a wall floor-to-ceiling can make a small space feel larger. In Rudy Saunders's apartment, an assortment of framed works (plus an overscaled watch clock!) draw the eye up, making the 375-square-foot studio feel more expansive.

SHOP GALLERY WALL KIT Frame Sets, from $166

4

Be Resourceful

Trevor Tondro

When space is limited and you don't want to shop for new, bulky furniture, use a chair as a side table and install wall sconces to save surface space. A cheerful color, like this pale turquoise hue, is also a good idea to set a happy mood in a tiny room.

SHOP SCONCES Arc Mid-Century Sconce, $79

5

Think Vertically

Nick Glemenakis

By hanging subway tile vertically—rather than the more common horizontal hang—designer Eneia White makes this modestly sized bathroom feel both taller and more streamlined. A tight palette of black, white, and blush prevent it from feeling cluttered.

SHOP TILE Subway Tile, $2.79

6

Hide the Utilities

Frank Tribble

For the restaurant at The Cornell Inn, Toledo Geller used drapery to cleverly conceal pipes and HVAC, creating an elegant canopy while avoiding visual chaos.

SHOP DRAPERY Navy Blackout Curtains, $31

7

Hang a Swing!

Nicholas Sargent

Since it doesn't take up any literal floor space, a swinging seat gives the appearance of a much more open room. For proof, look at the daybed Tiffany Brooks hung in this room at the Kips Bay Palm Beach showhouse.

SHOP SWINGS Hanging Daybed, $953

8

Shrink Your Dining Table

Tessa Neustadt

Small round tables aren't just for breakfast nooks. Ditch the giant dining table and give yourself some extra space by opting for a small, round dining table instead, like Emily Henderson did here.

SHOP TABLES Marble Dining Table, $999

9

Use a Day Bed

Toledo Geller

Add a day bed and watch your bedroom double in size. If you don't have a designated guest room, this could also come in handy in your living room.

SHOP BEDS Monarch Hill Daybed, $672

10

Maximize Shelving

Lesley Unruh

In this Manhattan apartment, Cece Barfield Thompson corralled the owner's books and accessories into one room, where built-in shelves—complete with gallery lights—make the items look deliberate. The best part? This library doubles as a dining room in the small apartment.

SHOP GALLERY LIGHTS Picture Light, $399

11

Express Yourself Everywhere

Anthony Dunning

Yes, even on the fridge—no, especially—your fridge and other bulky appliances. Since there's limited space for extras and less room to pile in all your favorite items, you'll need to beautify everything. Here, Anthony Dunning turned a regular old refrigerator into a design opportunity by dressing it up in removable wallpaper.

SHOP REMOVEABLE WALLPAPER Peel and Stick Paper, $150

12

Mount Your TV

Hecker Guthrie

A media console is the biggest space waster in a small living room. Mount your TV on the wall or above a fireplace and you'll regain necessary floor space.

SHOP WALL MOUNTS TV Wall Mount, $30

13

Hide Your TV

KARYN R. MILLET

Or, even better, hide it! Whether inside of a credenza or disguised as artwork, this design trick is perfect for anyone whose living room is always their family room, dining room, and/or more.

SHOP MEDIA CABINETS TV Stand, $300

14

Do Double Duty

TREVOR TONDRO

Pieces that can serve multiple purposes are key: Find a table that can function as a desk and dining table, get a deep sofa that can double as a guest bed, or buy cubes that serve as a coffee table and bonus seats when guests are over.

SHOP SEATING Storage Ottoman, $315

15

Take Advantage of Architectural Quirks

Shade Degges

Every single inch counts in a small house, so be sure to take full advantage of architectural quirks—this way, they'll actually become your favorite thing about the space. That radiator by your window? Invest in a pretty radiator cover and customize a cushion so you can use it as a window nook to read and relax in. (And you'll be able to forgo the bulky couch that'll take up half the studio!) Pile on the pillows and add a pendant light for tasks, as Jae Joo did here.

SHOP RADIATOR COVERS Radiator Cover, $255

16

Use Mirrors

Sara Tramp

It's the oldest design trick in the book: Mirrors will make your space feel larger, lighter, and airier. And a fun convex one like this adds a lot of personality without taking up a ton of space.

SHOP MIRRORS Mirror Plates, $16

17

Make Every Piece Count

Bjorn Wallander

Choose furnishings that offer maximum functionality in minimal square footage. For example, instead of an end bench, opt for a desk with a small side chair. You can use it for work, getting ready, and more.

SHOP DESKS Writing Desk, $68

18

Think About Scale

Corinne Mathern Design

If your kitchen doesn't have an island and you don't have a living room that's separate from the kitchen, don't give up on making it functional. Opt for a tall wooden table that can provide some extra counter space for cooking and as a two-top dining table. Use this one in a kitchen by Corinne Mathern Studio as your blueprint.

BUY SMALL ISLANDS Counter Table, $125

19

Keep It Neutral

deVol Kitchens

Calm, even-toned rooms fool the eye into thinking they're more spacious than they are. Make sure to add a variety of textures to keep the space from falling flat.

SHOP PILLOWS Velvet Pillow, $6

20

Convert a Closet

David Kaihoi

Designer David Kaihoi used some seriously smart storage solutions to make his New York City apartment work harder—including creating this compact laundry "room" in his closet. That way, when he's not doing laundry, he can close the door on these eyesore appliances.

SHOP LAUNDRY MACHINES Washer and Dryer Unit, $1259

21

Customize Storage

Fantastic Frank

Bespoke built-ins, storage nooks, and furniture tailored to your exact needs can utilize every available sliver of space. When they're part of the walls, you don't lose nearly as much valuable square footage. And extra storage under a bench helps, too.

SHOP BENCHES Storage Bench, $449

22

Create Zones

Ngoc Minh Ngo

In interior designer Max Sinsteden's studio, he made his sleep zone feel separate from the rest of the room by hanging a super high curtain and then suspending a floating painting to break it off even more. "I hate seeing a bed from the front door, so I added a curtain to partition that space. When you close it, you honestly feel like you're in a Parisian hotel," he tells us. This means you can entertain, too, without feeling like everyone's hanging out in your bedroom. "A small space doesn't hamper me from inviting 50 people over."

SHOP CEILING TRACKS Ceiling Track, $90

23

Use All Available Surface Space

Fantastic Frank

Even a windowsill can provide extra storage space for decor, lighting, and other essentials when there's no room for an extra table.

SHOP SHELVES Floating Shelf, $20

24

Get a Wall Desk

Nicole Franzen

Think you have no room for an office? Think again. A mounted wall desk takes up way less room—and you can even mount shelves above it for even more storage space. Designer Tariq Dixon transformed an unused corner by installing a wall-mounted desk.

SHOP DESKS Floating Desk, $65

25

Use Strategic Seating

Hecker Guthrie

Opt for extra seating that can fold up and be super compact so you can store it away while the guests aren't over. A stool like this one in a living room designed by Hecker Guthrie is perfect.

SHOP STOOLS Royal Design Folding Stool, $136

26

Use Bigger (But Fewer) Furnishings

Maltsev Design

It may seem counterintuitive, but outfitting a small space with just a few large-scale pieces (rather than a mishmash of pint-size furniture) can actually make it feel grander. Resist the urge to push all of your furniture up against the walls. If you create space behind the furniture, it makes the room look wider than it is.

SHOP BED FRAMES Canopy Bed, $1,299

27

Go Big in a Small Space

Peter Murdock

It's easy to overlook a room when it's super tiny, especially because there simply isn't enough useable space for décor. But it's definitely possible—and well worth it—to elevate and personalize these little rooms. Take this powder room in Ailana Michelle Ralph's home, for example. With a light blush pink wall color and a surrounding gallery of eclectic artwork, the small room packs a lot of punch.

SHOP FRAMES Gilt Frame, $39

28

Build Up

Fantastic Frank

Exploit the often under-utilized space between the tops of furniture and a room's ceiling with hanging or high-mounted elements. Take bookcases and cabinets all the way up—it'll make the room feel higher.

SHOP CABINETS Kitchen Cabinets, $489

29

Forgo Bulky Pieces

Studio DB

Though the under-the-sink storage can be great, larger vanities with a lot of drawers and cabinets can end up looking oversized and awkward in small spaces. In this bathroom designed by Studio DB, the dainty marble vanity has plenty of surface space and the extra towel tracks and hooks take care of the storage needs.

SHOP TOWEL BARS Towel Bar, $50

30

Build a Partial Glass Wall

Fantastic Frank

Tear down walls, enlarge windows, or swap solid doors for glass to open up views and connect adjacent spaces.

SHOP HARDWARE Glass Door Sliding Track, $200

31

Incorporate Good Lighting

Eric Piasecki

Good lighting will make or break any room–big or small. Make sure to especially install good lighting in smaller, cramped spaces like a bathroom with a tiny window, as shown in this gorgeous space.

SHOP LIGHTS Mount Ceiling Light, $23

32

Edit Yourself

Victoria Pearson

You don't have to display everything. After all, nothing makes a room feel smaller than clutter.

SHOP SHELVES White Shelf, $397

Hadley Mendelsohn Senior Editor Hadley Mendelsohn is House Beautiful's senior design editor and the co-host and executive producer of the podcast Dark House.

Small room ideas and small space design - small house ideas

STEPHAN JULLIARD

There is something about small room ideas that tends to send people into a panic. Granted, a small room does require more thought in the decoration than bigger rooms tend to and finding the right solution for the space can take a little know-how and a lot of research to find that you may not have considered before. Luckily, our Decoration Editor Ruth Sleightholme is full of knowledge for small room ideas, having worked on spaces of all shapes and sizes over her career to date.

MAY WE SUGGEST: Small living room ideas to copy

How do you design a small room?

'Eliminate awkward gaps with purposeful joinery,' she advises as a first step. 'Furniture floats more in a small room, because any gap between it and the wall is awkward and small. Instead, think about using built-in furniture to fit everything in properly. For example, make a dining nook with banquette seating (with storage underneath) that goes the width of a room, or build a box bed into the length of the room, making space for niches and cupboards.' You might think this would cause the room to feel smaller, but as everything will then have a set place, it achieves the opposite effect and keeps it organised at the same time.

MAY WE SUGGEST: Christmas decoration ideas

With this kind of approach – of which there are many stylish examples in the gallery below – Ruth advises you have to 'lose space to gain space. You may lose a few centimetres of floor space to create a panel behind a built-in bed but you gain space when you’re using it and have a bedside table built in, rather than one taking up floor space'. In compact bathrooms and bedrooms in particular, Ruth's advice is to keep as much off the floor as possible as a clear floor creates the idea of space. Instead, consider, for example, a wall-mounted basin and towel rail and bedside tables that are built into a headboard.

How can you maximise a small room?

'Look at all the different surfaces in the room and think about using spaces that you don’t often notice,' says Ruth. 'It's something Beata Heuman does so well, building little shelves on top of radiators, or you can consider the inside walls of a window or the inside edge of a dividing wall and sides of a chimney breast and see if there’s something you can use them for, like a little shelf all the way up the chimney breast, a shelf and cupboard underneath a windowsill, or little shelves along the inside edge of a thick wall. See things not as they look at first but in raw volumes and where you can access things from – look beyond it as it is now and be ambitious about what’s possible and where you might be able to add storage or make what you have more practical. A good example is a small Paris flat by Marianne Evennou, who installed a washing machine into a corner cupboard in the kitchen, but the door is in the hallway. That way, the corner unit is used but in an effective way, so there is no dead space. It's not something you immediately think of, so you need to take time to look at all those possibilities.'

MAY WE SUGGEST: Design ideas for built-in furniture

'You have to solve the issue first and then apply your taste when you have the solution you need,' continues Ruth, who suggests building a bank of references about how to work with a chimney breast or bay window in a small space, for example, and rather than discounting something for its style, instead look past that at the tricks used to maximise space. Once you land on something that works for your small room, then go into the styling. 'One great thing is that you can fill a room with a single idea done confidently,' according to Ruth. 'For example, a small bathroom has far less space to decorate so you can afford to tile all the way up to the ceiling and it will look great.'

7 practical solutions for small spaces

Tips

Built-in storage

Built-in storage is a simple and convenient solution for a small bedroom. The shelving system located behind the headboard will not take up much space, and thanks to the laconic design and neutral shades, the shelves will “dissolve” into space. Wardrobes on both sides of the bed create the necessary symmetry in the interior, focusing on the sleeping area.

The apartment of the photographer Ragnar Emarsson. There are tall wardrobes on both sides of the bed. Above the headboard is an open shelf with books and his photographs.

Glass partitions

Glass partitions or windows between rooms will help to zone the room without cluttering up the space or blocking sunlight. This solution will be optimal for studio apartments, in which there is a window on only one side. Transparent glass in a black frame will give the interior a modern look with industrial style elements.

Project by Victoria Vitkovskaya and Victoria Stupak. Kitchen and living room. Headset, Siemens. Paint on the wall, Little Greene.

Apartment in Moscow. Project by Victoria Biryulya.

Photo
Alexander Volodin

Wall lighting

Free up space by decorating the room with a wall lamp instead of a floor lamp. The flexible arm option allows you to adjust the direction of the light, which is especially convenient when reading or watching a movie.

Designer Daria Kolesova. Living room. Sofa, Furman. Ledge table, Kare Design. Carpet, Zara Home. Sconce, Flos. Porcelain tile on floor 41Zero42 Paint it. Built-in light, Centrsvet.

Open hangers

The clothes rail above the bed takes up minimal space and becomes an accent piece of the interior, while neatly hung dresses, sweaters and shirts complete the decor, giving the room a special cosiness. Also, pre-assembled images that are always in front of your eyes will simplify the choice of outfit in the morning.

Designed by Arcus Design. The bed and wardrobe behind it are made to order. Dresser. IKEA. Green handmade cushions, Embra workshop. Paint, Little Greene. The mural is inspired by the work of the artist Henri Rousseau "Dream".

Use all surfaces

Use every centimeter of space! A wide window sill can easily turn into a full-fledged workplace or recreation area, and low shelving can become a comfortable reading nook. And do not forget about the walls: they are suitable not only for paintings and shelves, but also for storing a bicycle, which will become an unusual element of the interior.

Designed by architect Jack Chen.

Project by Rustem Urazmetov. The walls are covered with paint, Tikkurila. Decor, IKEA.

Two in one

Combine your seating area with storage systems. A soft corner with drawers will become your favorite place in the house and at the same time save space for everything you need. In an open-plan apartment, you can highlight the bedroom area using a podium with a built-in bed and wardrobes.

Project by Rustem Urazmetov. A soft corner by the window with storage boxes, where the lounge area is located. Decor, IKEA.

Project by Yulia Schmidt and Alexandra Taranova. The bedroom area is highlighted with a podium with a built-in bed and storage systems. Instead of a bedside table, there is a restored Braun tube radio, Oleg Monastyrsky's collection.

Bar counter

The bar counter has long been loved by designers and owners of small apartments due to its functionality. A high and narrow countertop will save valuable square meters by replacing a kitchen or dining table. In addition, in studio apartments, the bar counter often serves to zoning the space, separating the kitchen-dining room from the living room.

Project by Sergei Bakharev and Dmitry Zhigalev. Bar stools, Isabel by Cattelan Italia. The kitchen and bar counter are made to order according to the sketches of the designers.

Apartment of photographer Stéphane Juliard and journalist Jan Phillips in Paris. The kitchen island is made of Carrara marble. Faucet, designed by Arne Jacobsen, Vola. Bar stools designed by Majda Bazerjee, Galerie Patrick Fourtin.


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Small Apartment Hacks: Ideas for Small Rooms

Renovating a small apartment doesn't have to cost as much as the apartment itself. A practicing designer gives simple and working advice.

"Small apartment" is not only about low-cost buildings. But also about the tiny apartments of the old stock: well located, but very small in size. And also about small rooms, which often appear even in spacious houses.

If you look, half of Paris lives in these tiny apartments. Nevertheless, people live, make beautiful interior design and enjoy good organization of space.
______________________________

RELATED…
Microtrends: "Bedroom in a cube" - and why not
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No - furniture lists
We usually plan the environment in the spirit of "I need a table, a couple of chairs, a sofa and a wardrobe. " This is a fundamentally wrong and even dangerous approach in the case of small apartments: force the whole space, and it will turn out to be uncomfortable and uncomfortable. There is no place to receive guests, you have to work at the dinner table, and you constantly hit the corners.

Yes - functional zone lists
With a standard furniture list, you immediately limit the number of possible space scenarios. You need to plan not the number of items, but the functions: whether you need to receive guests somewhere, whether you need to make a home office area (or you are quietly working on a laptop in bed / on the sofa).

► So: first we make a list of tasks, then we look for solutions for them.

Parisdinterieur

Zones are not places, zones are movement scenarios
Thinking about zones is not only deciding where you will sleep, but where you will have breakfast. At the same time, it is important to ensure the convenience of traffic and place nearby what is used in life in one process.

Studio Bazi

Planning enough storage space is not enough. We still need to load these zones with additional functions, as well as understand how you will switch them from one mode to another.

Important: Multifunctionality is one of the main principles for small open spaces. Whether we like it or not, we are forced to use both individual items and entire zones in different scenarios and for different purposes.

INT2architecture

Maria Gubina

Pictured: This tiny 25 sqm studio in Sochi has a very unusual configuration. The only place for the kitchen is in the hallway. Designers made the kitchen look like a chest of drawers: when the lid opens, it simultaneously acts as an apron. In a small apartment, it is reasonable to build cabinets up to the ceiling. How exactly to do it right?

  1. Horizontal rows, not vertical narrow sections from the backsplash to the ceiling (if we are talking about the kitchen).
  2. Mezzanine above the main section of the wardrobe, if it is higher than 250 cm. Pantograph - a lowering bar - is no longer convenient to use at such a height.

Arkala Architecture

In the photo: even if the ceilings are sloping, use every centimeter

Batiik Studio

If there is an interior door in the way of the cabinet, make it one of the sections ... of the cabinet.

Batiik Studio

Batiik Studio

4. Wardrobes should be made in the color of the walls or with a slight difference in tone or shade. So the space becomes more solid and visually enlarges. Cabinets essentially turn into one of the walls and serve as a backdrop for individual beautiful pieces of furniture.

5. Ideal - cabinets without side panels in sight. That is, the cabinet is built into a niche entirely or occupies space from wall to wall, as in the example in the photo. Sometimes for this it is reasonable to “complete” the partition (see an illustrative example below - a plan and a photo of the completed project).

Vera Tarlovskaya Interiors

Vera Tarlovskaya Interiors

On the drawing: an example of a layout when a wall was completed in the corridor to visually hide the sides of an Ikeev cabinet

we only know about it from the plan. It's hard to guess, it's hard to guess

Atelier Germain

Storage systems instead of walls
The point is that cabinets are usually attached to the walls. And you can put cabinets instead of walls (where it is permissible and justified, of course). That is, simply do not make a partition or even demolish it and thereby gain 15-20 cm only due to the non-existent thickness of the partition.

It is possible to make a niche with built-in shelves on the wall section. Or through shelving. In general, I want to say: do not neglect narrow shelves, this is a very convenient thing! At 20 centimeters, you can place books and many small things if you keep them in organizer containers.

atelier daaa

In the photo: a narrow shelf is convenient for books and trifles, plus serves as a separator of functional areas

J Korsbon Designs

A case from practice. In one, albeit a large house, we made a pharmacy cabinet in the corridor. 11.5 cm is all we had in terms of depth for this cabinet. Inside, the depth of the shelf turned out to be only 7.3 cm, because we also added bumpers on the outside so that the bottles and vials do not fall. It turned out to be a spacious closet, where the hostess stored all pharmaceutical and cosmetic items. It was a common area, and it was easy for all members of a large family to take everything they needed from there. The customer was very pleased, besides, the beautiful facades supported the general theme of the carpentry in the corridor.

In the drawing below, notice that instead of a wall there are cabinet blocks ( « back to back » ).

On the kitchen side there will be cabinets with appliances, and on the side of the room there will be wardrobe sections (see photo of the project below) one part can be turned towards the kitchen, the other - to the side of the room

Lisa Adams, LA Closet Design

Choose drawer and fold out
Drawer and shelf occupy the same volume in the closet. Only in the first case, you effectively use the internal space, and in the second case, you crumple and forget what lies at the back wall.

Conclusion: wherever possible we use boxes, including non-standard ones. For example, narrow, full-height piers: such in kitchens are called “bottles”, and in dressing rooms “pharmacy cabinets”. Retractable sections of the wardrobe for shoes, for example, will allow you to use the 30–40 cm length of the facade much more efficiently, while all items will be clearly visible.

BESPOKE Interior Design & Production

Pull-out or fold-out shelf allows you to create an extra countertop or shelf where there seems to be no place for it. And get a work surface where you are free to arrange a dressing table or a mini-office, for example. Convenient when there is no space for a separate table.

Valet Custom Cabinets & Closets - Larry Fox

Pictured is an example of a narrow vertical storage system

newzboy

We make furniture to order
The best solutions for small spaces can only be realized by making non-standard products to order. It is not necessary to turn the entire apartment into a transformer, as is customary in Manhattan. In our reality, this is very costly. But spending time and money on the most optimal solution for the most important zone for you is definitely worth it. They invest in such things once, but then they use them for years. It is better to invest money and time in the implementation of ideas created specifically for small spaces than to buy mass-produced furniture for several thousand cheaper. And then regret that the place disappears.

ART-UGOL

Let's say I had clients for whom we arranged a podium bed with storage sections. A similar mass-produced bed with a box cost a little less. But with a special order, we were able to raise the height of the bed by the necessary centimeters so that several bulky suitcases would fit.

Pyotr Pokrovsky

In the photo: roll-out storage systems under the bed podium. Custom Made

Michael K Chen Architecture

Let the walls move
If space allows, many clients try to keep a dedicated room and kitchen. This desire is understandable, but sometimes already at the design stage it binds hands: inconveniences are laid right at the start.

Imagine: "odnushka" - an isolated kitchen and a room: you have to constantly make a U-shaped detour to get from one room to another. I'm not saying "tear down everything you can and make a studio." I say that traffic routes are no less important than the actual interior design.

atelier daaa

There should be quick and easy communication between rooms: take a tray of cups, bring drinks, etc. The ability to combine zones, at least visually, is a very big plus even from the point of view of psychology: you will not feel squeezed in a small cage.

De Rosee Sa

Ideally, if you can isolate each zone with one movement, such as pushed / pushed or opened / closed. Or, at least, provide this option for one zone. So that if two people live, one can sleep, for example, in the dark, and the other can sit at a laptop and drink tea.

It is not necessary to make the whole apartment into one space. But you need to think and find such an option to provide all the other scenarios that will be needed sooner or later.

Sliding partitions - a time-tested solution. But for various reasons, they may not fit. For example, because no cabinets can be placed along the partition. We need alternative solutions.

richhof

Solution #1. Opening with storage spaces + folding door
Provide an opening, make cabinets on one side, and above the opening too, all in one line. Put a folding (or rolling in a pocket) door - so that when open it does not protrude further than the facades. If you want to visually combine these two rooms even more, you can make the opening wider than the standard 80 or 90 cm. Or put an ordinary door, fitting it into the line of cabinets and camouflaging it under the facades.

De Rosee Sa

Solution #2. Blocks of cabinets instead of a wall + opening
On one side (for example, in the kitchen) there can be spacious cupboards with appliances. And from the side of the room - shelving. Make an opening for the door in them and hang a sliding door on one side. If the dimensions do not allow making cabinets on both sides, “back to back”, then you can turn part towards the kitchen, and part towards the room

Solution #3. Glazed opening
Openable. Plus, order a reclining countertop from the side of the room: when closed, it will cover the opening. You can provide a curtain, fit it all into racks or closed cabinet sections, again. You can combine this layout with a door. As a result, there will be more air, more light, a feeling of more space, the interior as a whole will become more interesting and functional.

atelier daaa

In conclusion
Small space does not mean that there is nowhere to store things, it will be a mess and ugly.


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