General12:15 · Jun 15

How to Hide 30 Pairs of Shoes in a Hallway Without Losing Wall Space

Kikar HaShabbatReligious
Translated & summarized from Kikar HaShabbat by baba
The story · English

A home design article explains a carpentry solution for cramped entryways: a shoe cabinet that uses the wall’s depth so efficiently it almost disappears. The idea is meant to solve a common hallway problem, where children’s sneakers and slippers end up scattered in the passage and make the home feel cluttered.

The piece says standard shoe cabinets sold by major retailers are usually 35 to 40 centimeters deep, which can make a typical hallway too narrow, especially in busy morning hours when children are heading out the door. That often leads families to give up on the cabinet and leave shoes in piles by the entrance.

The alternative is a slanted-opening mechanism, known as a flap system, that stores shoes vertically rather than horizontally. With that layout, the cabinet can be only 15 to 17 centimeters deep, yet still hold around 30 pairs. The design uses the cabinet’s height, about 120 centimeters, to create three or four levels of double drawers, with each pair sliding in upright and securely.

To make the cabinet blend in, the article recommends painting it the same color as the wall behind it, such as off-white or cream, and using integrated recessed handles or a touch-open mechanism with no protruding handles. The result, it says, is a hallway that looks wider, cleaner, and more open.

Read the original at Kikar HaShabbat
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