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This Easy Bed Placement Trick Will Max Out Your Bedroom’s Square Footage Instantly

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Credit:Sylvie Li
Credit: Apartment Therapy

小/酷体验在家里把20 trends to life by 20 designers—all in less than 120 square feet.Check out the whole virtual experience here。感谢我们的赞助商原意,亚马逊手工制作的and Tuft & Needle for making this experience possible

Having a bigger bedroom is near the top of a lot of peoples’ home wish lists. Who wouldn’t love a few extra square feet for a reading nook, right? Turns out, there’s one easy (and free) way to achieve a more spacious room—no knocking down walls required.

In her eye-catching creation for Apartment Therapy’sSmall/Cool Experience at Home, designerAngela Beltused a simple bed placement trick to max out her small space’s square footage—she pushed herhardwood bed frameto the corner of the room.

It’s a simple (and wonderfully effective) way to make a tiny space feel much larger. In Belt’s Small/Cool room, called “The Dark Side,” putting the bed in the corner freed up floor space and allowed her to create “zones” within the 120-square-foot room.

Credit: Danie Drankwalter

The bed effectively comprises the sleeping zone, while anightstand that doubles as a vanity—plus ascalloped screen—acts as the dressing zone. The square footage saved allows for a small living area with a chaise lounge, as well as a workspace in the form of a mid-century modern desk. All four “zones” wouldn’t have been possible if the bed was flanked by two perfectly symmetrical nightstands.

During anInstagram Live chatwith Belt and Apartment Therapy’s Home Director Danielle Blundell, Blundell noted putting the bed in the corner is often a no-no when it comes to design.

“Sometimes you have to break a rule and be OK with it,” Belt says.

In this case, it’s more than OK. It’s a genius layout trick, and one that can also be applied to studio apartment floor plans, too.

You can see the style strategy at play inthe room, dubbed “The Dark Side,” designed by Belt for the Small/Cool Experience 2020。Click over to seethe rest of the products and paint colorsfeatured in this room.

Madeline Bilis

Real Estate Editor

Madeline Bilis is a writer and editor with a soft spot for brutalist buildings. Her work has appeared in Travel + Leisure, Boston magazine, the Boston Globe, and other outlets. She has a degree in journalism from Emerson College and published her first book, 50 Hikes in Eastern Massachusetts, in August 2019.

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