Insight · Storage
Cupboards, joinery and dead-space use.
Pantry volume, wardrobe internals, and hallway cupboards that actually get used.
Storage is the quiet determinant of whether renovated rooms stay tidy. Adelaide homes often lack pantry volume, wardrobe depth, and hallway utility — when prior layouts wasted space.
We ask clients to list what must live in each zone: small appliances, bulk groceries, cleaning products, sports gear, linen volumes. A storage list shows that a standard 600 mm pantry cupboard fails a family buying bulk rice and snacks. Depth, shelf spacing, and internal fittings follow inventory — to your list.
Drawers outperform doors below bench for pots and pans. Pull-out pantries suit narrow spaces. Corner mechanisms cost more but reclaim dead zones. Over-fridge cabinets work when ceiling height allows; otherwise integrated fridge panels look cleaner than shallow useless boxes.
Bin and recycling: Integrated waste systems need cabinet width and plumbing proximity for sink rinse habits. Planning bins after joinery design guarantees awkward pull-outs.
Recessed niches in showers reduce bottle sprawl. Vanity drawers with internal organisers beat cavernous doors under sink. Mirror cabinets suit small Adelaide bathrooms where floor area cannot grow. Towel storage needs ventilation — closed cupboards without airflow grow mustiness.
Hanging length for coats versus shirts differs. Shoe shelves need depth. Drawers for folded items reduce hanging overload. Walk-in robes in master bedrooms sometimes steal room area better used for ensuite or desk space — we challenge oversized robe dreams when floor plans are tight.
Hall cupboards reclaim visual calm from visible clutter. Upstairs linen presses near bathrooms reduce cross-house traffic. In two-storey Adelaide homes, missing upstairs storage dumps items on stair landings — predictable and avoidable.
Media units with concealed cabling, window seats with drawers, and bookshelf walls anchor open plans that otherwise lack places for books and games. Built-ins should align with window and door positions — awkward asymmetry reads as afterthought.
Internal hardware — runners, lift systems, pantry fittings — concentrates cost where daily use justifies it. We allocate budget to high-touch storage before decorative features with low functional return. Clients who spend on premium stone but cheap runners feel the mismatch within months.
Adjustable shelves and modular internals adapt as households change. Children grow; hobbies shift. Storage that cannot evolve becomes furniture clutter again — defeating renovation purpose.
Before specifying pantry volume, we often ask clients to stack a week of groceries and note bulky items — dog food, small appliances, serving ware. Real volume beats guesswork from catalogue cabinet counts.
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Under-stair, bulkhead, and hallway niches can host storage without extending footprint. We measure these zones early — they are often lost when focus stays only on main rooms.
Coats, shoes, and bags need home at entry or they migrate to kitchen benches. Narrow hall cupboards with ventilated shoe storage solve daily clutter.
Storage that cannot be reached is storage unused. Depth and shelf spacing should match what you actually store — measure pantry goods, not idealised minimalism.