T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
173.1 | Windows in the closet | NUWAVE::SUNG | Al Sung (Xway Development) | Thu Mar 05 1987 18:51 | 5 |
| Traditionally, outside walls are reserved for windows (and
baseboard heating elements). I don't see any reason why a
closet can't be on an outside wall.
-al
|
173.2 | Not a big problem, but... | VINO::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Fri Mar 06 1987 07:57 | 5 |
|
Closets on outside walls get cold in the winter. Great for
a pantry - keeps perishables nice and fresh. Terrible for
clothes - pulling on well chilled clothing on a winter morning
is no way to wake up (louvered doors help).
|
173.3 | outside wall closets | MPGS::ROGUSKA | | Fri Mar 06 1987 08:26 | 7 |
| I grew up in a house that had all but 2 closets on outside
walls and did not experience cold clothes. My parents still
live in the house, it a rather modern house with mostly large
open rooms, and their coat closet is on the outside wall and
we have no problem with cold coats when we visit. Maybe the
house was build with this type of problem in mind and that
is why there is no problem, this was the original design.
|
173.4 | | JETSAM::NORRIS | What is it, Miss Pfeffernuss? | Fri Mar 06 1987 08:44 | 6 |
| We don't have outside wall closets. But we have two cedar window
boxes. The sweaters are cold in the morning. I told my wife that
now I understand why they are good for wools, the moths freeze
to death :-)
Ed
|
173.5 | Proper design usually has closets built together. | DRUID::CHACE | | Fri Mar 06 1987 10:23 | 6 |
| The reason closets aren't usually on outside walls is because
they would have to jut into the room. From a design standpoint,
if they are on an inside wall then you can have two closets sharing
the same wall (one facing each way) with an otherwise straight wall.
Kenny
|
173.6 | Well, there are some good reasons.... | SEINE::CJOHNSON | Back from the desert!! | Fri Mar 06 1987 11:08 | 7 |
| I have a laundry/sewing room located on the north side of my
house in which I designed a winter/summer type closet along the
outside wall. This is the closet which houses winter garb in
the summer and summer garb in the winter, but it's main purpose
in life is to act as a buffering area along the north wall.
Charlie
|
173.7 | Closets are good insulation | YODA::BARANSKI | Searching for Lowell Apartmentmates... | Fri Mar 06 1987 11:41 | 6 |
| Closets are good for both noise and thermal insulation. If you put one on the
outside wall, chances are that you will not need a baseboard heater there. If
you put closets on interior walls between bedrooms then a ruckus in one room
will not be heard in the other.
Jim.
|
173.8 | Outside wall is better | STAR::SWIST | Jim Swist ZKO1-1/D42 381-1264 | Fri Mar 06 1987 11:58 | 8 |
| Re .6. Yep, one of the teachings of at least one school of
"energy-efficient home design" says that the FIRST choice for closet
location is the outside wall (north, east, or west).
Seems like a waste of heat to keep all your clothes warm for the
benefit of the few you put on at any given time. Besides, most
indoor clothing has negligible thermal mass and will come up to
temperature in minutes.
|
173.9 | wet clothes a problem | SCOTIA::PASCO | Mark 'PASCO' Pascarelli | Mon Mar 09 1987 19:48 | 12 |
| In my house....
Warm air enters closet when you open it. After you close the door
the air cools off against outside wall and loses it's moisture as
condensation against cold wall. Any clothes touching wall in closet
become cold and DAMP. Nothing worse than removing a suit from the
back of your closet as you are late for a wedding and finding mold
growing on the wet sleeves.
Pasco
|
173.10 | Closet organizers ? | IMBACQ::ELLISON | Dave Ellison | Wed Dec 30 1987 21:07 | 2 |
| Does anyone have any comments or experiance with modular
closet organizers, prepackaged or customized?
|
173.11 | Pretty good idea | VLNVAX::SUMNER | Senility has set in | Thu Dec 31 1987 14:33 | 19 |
|
I installed some of those vinyl covered "refrigerator shelf"
organizers a while back and have found that they hold up very well.
Compared to customizing wood shelves and dowel-type hangers they
installed very easily. There are many different combinations and
accesories that you can install so my advice would be to visit a
store that carries a *complete* line of accesories so that you can
get the best idea of what may suit your needs. I picked up a
package that included several different shelves and a "suggested"
format, but I set my closet up much differently than their suggestions
(I found the per-shelf price to be cheaper this way.)
While shopping around I found SPAGS in Shrewsbury Ma. (Ye olde
schoolhouse) to have the best price per section but SPAGS prices
could be met by a good sale at some local hardware stores. Those
thing are always on sale, so keep your eyes open.
Glenn
|
173.12 | Ortho book | FDCV14::DUNN | Karen Dunn 223-2651 | Thu Dec 31 1987 14:36 | 4 |
|
there is a book that Ortho puts out about storage ideas for
closets or otherwise wasted spaces. It is at least worth looking at
while you're standing in a bookstore or hardware store.
|
173.13 | CALIFORNIA CLOSETS | FSTTOO::FRITZ | | Tue Jan 05 1988 11:20 | 11 |
|
There is a place in Woburn, Ma called CALIFORNIA CLOSETS. They
have good ideas on closet space, they also have brochures in the
office that you could pickup. Check them out.
^ ^
"
~~~
|
173.14 | Watch the $$$ | STAR::SWIST | Jim Swist ZKO1-1/D42 381-1264 | Wed Jan 06 1988 13:20 | 8 |
| You gotta watch out for the costs on stuff like closet maid. It's
pretty good stuff, but those elaborate layouts you see on the packages
and ads with several shelves, drawers, various hangers and organizers,
etc, will probably cost a lot more than it looks like it's worth.
All the pieces are sold a la carte and you can nickel and dime yourself
up to $100 easily for one layout.
|
173.15 | Try it yourself... | VINO::GRANSEWICZ | Auhhhhh, I've been slimed! | Wed Jan 06 1988 15:32 | 21 |
| My closets were too small for the organizer packages so I created
one from aluminum tubing and a wire shelf. The closet only extends
about 1 foot to either side of the door and the usual one rod 5
feet from the floor was there. I ripped that out. Patched up the
walls and painted. I then used the aluminum tubing to create a
double hanging space for 3/4 of the closet and a full length space
for the remainder. I then put a wire shelf above this.
I like this better than the closet organizers for a couple of reasons.
The aluminum tubing is stronger and you can slide metal coat hangers
on the stuff. I don't think you can do this with those wire shelves.
Also, I thought that the plastic coating of the shelves would
eventually wear off.
The total cost was around $10 for the tubing (2, 8ft sections),
$9 for the tubing connectors (6 of them), $4 for the shelf and $2
for shelf connectors. These are all approximate costs since this
was a little while back. All of the materials are available at
Spag's.
Phil
|
173.16 | China Closet, Built-in | PARITY::SZABO | Thank you Don Pardo.... | Fri Feb 05 1988 11:43 | 28 |
| I have an unfinished built-in china cabinet, and need to complete
this thing before I get thrown out, literally.
This china cabinet was put in by the builder to fill-in the space
of a clothes closet (room originally a bedroom, now a dining room).
He boxed-in the closet, put a couple lights in overhead, then
sheetrocked it, taped it, and compounded and sanded a couple times.
The problem is, the builder had his "go-fer" do this to save some
bucks, and he did a lousy job- nothing's square. I wanted to put
a full mirror on the back wall and glass shelves, but it's impossible.
I even had `professional' drywallers come in to estimate finishing
it, and after the hysterical laughter, they either said forget it,
or wanted to charge big bucks to `do it over'.
Well, I decided that I'd rather tear this thing apart and give it
a try myself from scratch. I've been looking around for help in
designs or just basic ideas, but no luck. Basically, I want to
use the same idea with the mirror and glass shelves, but I want
to utilize the wasted space on both sides plus the bottom of the
cabinet.
Also, I'm not sure whether to use sheetrock again or build it out
of wood. I really need to see other designs, or need advice, on
what to do, etc.
Please help, it's cold outside! Thanks.
John
|
173.17 | I don't like sheetrock inside my china cabinet | FREDW::MATTHES | | Sat Feb 06 1988 07:45 | 16 |
| Funny, that's one of my projects coming up. I like your idea of
the mirrored back.
I had planned basically to 'shoehorn' a standard china cabinet into
a closet, formerly bedroom now dining room. That is, from the outside
there is a glass doored top and drawers on the bottom. From the
inside, it looks like a standard china cabinet. I hadn't even figured
on the sheetrocking - it's already there in my case.
Why can't you take the maximum square space and build a cabinet
within the closet? Where it's not square you shim. Don't worry
about the existing surface. What space is wasted should be no problem.
The closet I'm working in results in an oversized china cabinet.
I haven't thought this out thoroughly. I've got a couple of other
projects I have to finish up. This one's on the 'list'.
|
173.18 | Removing kneewall stud for closet opening | SALEM::PAGLIARULO | | Mon Feb 22 1988 22:27 | 57 |
| I've got a framing question for the bathroom I'm remodeling.
The house is a cape and the bathroom is built from a domer put
on the back. With a tub and john on one wall and a vanity on the
other there's not a whole lot of room for a closet what with the
roof line and the chimney. I'd like to make better use of the space
under the eaves and have come up with this idea. I'd like to frame
an opening in the wall where the eave is located and use the space
for drawers for blankets, towels and such. I'm not concerned
with framing the opening - I know enough to use the proper header
construction and doubling up on the support studs etc. etc. but right
in the middle of the wall where I want the opening is a kneewall
stud. It looks kind of like this (damn these "graphics")
/
/!
/ !
/ !
/ !
/========
/I ! I
/ I ! I framed opening
/ I ! I into eave
^
!--- kneewall stud
What I want to do is place supports for this rafter on both sides of
the newly framed opening and then cut the interfering kneewall stud.
Final construction would look like this:
/
/ l
l = added supports for / l
rafter / l
/ l
/ l
/! l
/ ! l
/ ! l
/ ! l
/======== l
/I I l
/ I I l framed opening
/l I I l into eave
It looks fine to me. It doesn't seem that I'm loosing any support
and in fact with the two supports on the rafter rather than one
seem to be adding to the strength. But then I'm not a structural
engineer. Anyone see anything wrong with this idea? Is there
something that I'm overlooking? Oh yeah, the finalopening will
be 36" wide.
Thanks,
George
|
173.19 | | NETMAN::SEGER | this space intentionally left blank | Tue Feb 23 1988 08:09 | 7 |
| I wasn't aware that a knee wall provided ANY structural support - then again,
there's alot of things I'm not aware of...
Anyhow, if this is indeed the case, I don't see why you'd have to double up on
anything and could simply rip the sucker out of there.
-mark
|
173.20 | | SALEM::PAGLIARULO | | Tue Feb 23 1988 08:22 | 8 |
| re .1
I wasn't sure about this either but I figured I'd find out about
worst case. If it isn't structurally important (other than holding
up sheetrock) it sure would make things easier.
George
|
173.21 | You can NEVER have too many closets! | VLNVAX::SUMNER | Senility has set in | Tue Feb 23 1988 20:42 | 13 |
| Your kneewall stud probably isn't structural. A good way to
check is to take a look at the rest of the eves and see if there
are any more kneewall studs, if not then you probably don't have
much to worry about. Also, this kneewall stud sounds like it doesn't
sit on top of a load bearing wall so transfering the weight of the
stud to the sides would be another alternative.
More than likely, the little sucker is only there to hold up
your sheetrock (or plaster.)
Glenn
|
173.24 | Closet Design creativity sought | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Thu Apr 28 1988 19:21 | 20 |
| I am converting a loft into a bedroom. Thus, (as commented elsewhere) it
needs a wardrobe. The room is fair sized, and has 2-3 cabinets tucked into
the walls, but because the room is half-a-level above everything else, all
the cabinets start at about the 3.5' level, and I can't sink anything into
the walls below that level as the space is occupied by other rooms. So, I
have to put a closet within the room itself. I have looked at pre-made
wardrobes, and thought about building one myself (not too hard). But, the
room isn't huge, and because one wall has a large window, and the roof slants
down from one end to another, high wall perimeter is at a premium. Worse,
because of unfortuate placement of windows and doors, no corners are
available. My fear is that a big boxey thing will make it seem smaller.
This may be a pipe dream, but does anyone have any ideas on how to add small
(say 30" wide x 66" high x 22" deep) wardrobe capacity to a room in a
spacious, (airy?) kind of way? Its a neat room to live in, just no obvious
place for a traditional closet. All ideas gladly welcomed....
thanx ./j
[looked, but couldn't find prior reference, but may have mis-looked. please
point if appropriate)
|
173.25 | Ya gotta know when to quit | HPSVAX::SHURSKY | | Fri Apr 29 1988 09:34 | 8 |
| Jeff,
This is what you get for spending that money on the staircase.
You were just asking for it. One thing leads to another which
leads to another.... Pretty soon you will be putting on a dormer
so you can put the closet where the window is, then you will...
Stan {;-)
|
173.26 | closet organizer store?? | USWAV3::FAGERBERG | | Fri Apr 29 1988 10:18 | 5 |
|
You might spend some time at one of those closet organizer design
stores. The have all kinds of gadgets to utilize space, especially
knee walls and open areas. Open area, free standing arrangements
must be kept neat! If one of you is a neatnik......
|
173.27 | book | FDCV14::DUNN | Karen Dunn 223-2651 | Fri Apr 29 1988 11:02 | 4 |
|
Ortho has a book on storage space ideas. It's usually racked with the
gardening, carpentry, etc, books.
|
173.28 | | VIDEO::DCL | David Larrick | Fri Apr 29 1988 11:28 | 18 |
| In defense of "pre-made wardrobes":
They come in all conceivable shapes and sizes, and cubic-inch-for-cubic-inch
they make better use of space than equivalent built-ins because their walls
are thinner. For our turn-of-the-century house, antique wardrobes were the
clear choice.
Ways to make them light and airy:
- get one with a mirrored door
- get one with high, spindly feet
- get one made of light-colored wood, or painted a light color
Antique stores (especially ones that specialize in furniture rather than
bric-a-brac) usually have better selection of shapes and sizes than
new-furniture stores, at comparable or better prices. One caveat: many
antique wardrobes predate the widespread use of hangers; clothes were hung
on hooks. So many smaller wardrobes aren't deep enough for hangers. Take
a hanger along when you go wardrobe-shopping.
|
173.29 | | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Sun May 01 1988 02:00 | 6 |
| Here's a simple scheme: put in two closet bars, one above the other.
66" ought to be enough to hang your shirts in two levels. What you
do with your pants, I don't know, probably fold them up in drawers
(so to speak).
Larry
|
173.30 | | VINO::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Sun May 01 1988 16:10 | 4 |
|
If it works for some people to divide a closet in half vertically
by putting in two closet poles, could it work for you to build just
the top half of a closet into the space that starts at 3.5'?
|
173.31 | More info on the premade kind? | REGENT::MERSEREAU | | Mon May 02 1988 11:50 | 9 |
|
RE: .4
Dave, that is a good idea (particulary for my turn of the century
house). Could you mention a few of the antique shops that you
know carry them (especially any reasonably priced ones)?
-tm
|
173.32 | DCL's quick guide to antiques | VIDEO::DCL | David Larrick | Mon May 02 1988 12:31 | 19 |
| Sure, here's a quick list of some places where I've seen suitable stuff:
Encores, on Rt. 2A in Acton across from A.C. Chevrolet
The barn in Acton, on Rt. 2A about 1/2 mile west of Rt. 27
A place on Littleton Common
A place on Moody St. in Waltham, across from Waltham Camera and Stereo
If you're in a hurry to get the furniture into place, going the antique route
probably isn't a good idea. But if you've got some time, spend a pleasant
half hour at each of several antique stores every couple of months. Talk
with the proprietors about what you're looking for, and they'll watch the
market and call you when they find something. Learn as much as you can about
the type of furniture you want, by reading, looking, and talking.
If you're looking for bargains, you probably won't find them - antique store
owners that underprice their merchandise don't stay in business long. If
you're looking for value, antique furniture is tough to beat.
I know several people that have had good success at antique auctions.
|
173.33 | | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Mon May 02 1988 17:27 | 6 |
| RE the past few...
The room is likely to be used be a female-type person. It already has
a small upper-half-height closet with rod, I'd like to put in
something a bit higher.
/j
|
173.34 | Antique wardrobes at 1988+ prices | OBSESS::COUGHLIN | Kathy Coughlin-Horvath | Mon May 02 1988 22:55 | 4 |
|
I've seen beautiful wardrobes at Encores - all were pretty major
expenses/investments.
|
173.35 | Strong closet rods?? | PALMER::PALMER | half a bubble off plumb | Tue May 03 1988 09:09 | 13 |
| I need a 4' closet rod, and I need it to be strong. My wife
packs a closet and causes normal closet bars and dowels to bend
and break. I set up the walls so I can connect the rod directly
to a stud, but I'm not sure of what to use as a rod. I was thinking
of going to my local plumbing supply store and buying 1" galvanized
pipe. They will cut it to length and thread it. I can use the
round threaded connectors to screw it to the wall. Does anyone
have any cheaper ideas?
I bought two wardrobes and love them. Antique ones can run
you $500 and up. I picked mine up from an old lady in Newton for
$100. Check the papers in neighborhoods with lots of old houses
for ads.
=Ralph=
|
173.36 | ex | SAGE::FLEURY | | Wed May 04 1988 08:09 | 34 |
| RE .-1
What I have done in the past is to use standard closet pole with
additional support brackets. Within the 4', you chould be able
to place two supports in the middle of the bar with the ends supported
by wood against the walls. See rough diagram below:
Closet support brackets
/ \
/ \
+-+ +-+
| | || || | |
| |=============================| |
| | | |
+-+ +-+
^ ^
| |
Wood board nailed/screwed to wall.
The wood on the walls should be cut out as follows:
Side 1: +-------+ Side 2: +-------+
| | | |
| __| | /
| |__| | |_/
| | | |
| | | |
+-------+ +-------+
The diagrams above are trying to show that side 1 should have a
hold the size of the closet pole with side two having a slot in
which you can slide the pole. This arrangement will prevent the
pole from sliding side to side.
|
173.37 | | PRAVDA::JACKSON | Watchin the whites of my eyes turn red | Wed May 04 1988 08:45 | 8 |
| I just used some 3/4 inch galvanized pipe. There's no need to get
it threaded. What I did was take a small chunk of wood (I think
I used Oak scraps) about 3x3 inches, bored a hole in the middle
of it and then screwed it to the wall, one on each end. Worked
very well and it was cheap.
-bill
|
173.38 | Speak your mind, and mind what you speak | GIDDAY::GILLARD | Eyeless in Gaza | Wed May 04 1988 20:39 | 13 |
| Re: 2256.9
> The room is likely to be used be a female-type person.
Transvestite ?
Very effeminate man ?
If you mean "woman" why don't you just say so.
Henry (who_may_be_a_misogamist_but_who_is_not_such_a_
misogynist_that_he_can't_bring_himself_to_use_that_word)
|
173.39 | aluminum poles | NYEM1::MILBERG | Barry Milberg | Mon May 09 1988 02:36 | 8 |
| getting back to the closet pole question...
I like to use the aluminum tubing antenna masts. They are strong
and not as heavy as the steel pipe. Available at your local home
center or Radio S**k in 4 (or sometimes 6) foot lengths.
-Barry-
|
173.40 | Closet size? | FIDERE::NAMOGLU | Sheryl Namoglu : VMS Development | Mon Jul 18 1988 09:57 | 18 |
|
We are contemplating making some interior wall moves in our house.
We will basically steal some footage from one bedroom and use it
to enlarge the master bedroom. This will require that we move
the closets in the two small bedrooms.
My question is : what is considered an adequate sized closet? The
rooms are small (about 10X12) and are the 2nd/3rd bedrooms of the
house. Right now, their closets are about 5 - 5.5 foot. It is
my impression that these are good sized closets. The design we
have in mind would make one closet 3.5 foot and the other 4 foot.
Is this too small? I know that "small" is a relative term, but
I would like to get some general opinions.
Thanks
Sherry
|
173.41 | Sounds small to me... | POOL::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-02/Y05 -- dtn 381-2684 | Mon Jul 18 1988 13:44 | 23 |
| Your right, it's relative. It also depends on what you're used to
having. I grew up in an older house with very limited closet space
-- in the 3.5-4 foot range you mention -- but I whouldn't want to
go back to this. I' recommend 5-6 feet per person -- i.e. 10-12
feet for a bedroom intended for two. This assumes that you have
that much space again in the attic/basement/garrage for off season
storage of seasonal clothing. Otherwise I'd want a large walk-in
closet.
On the other hand.... Think about your closet for a minute. If its
like mine about half of it is filled with cloths you haven't worn
for at lest a year. Now the question becomes "Is it easier to
build a large closet or to give that unused stuff to charity?"
Thats a highly subjective decision.
Objectively, I think you'll find that most new construction has at
least 8-10 feet for the "master" bedroom and at least 4-5 feet in
other bedrooms. This is a guess -- I haven't been running around
with a tape measure.
Bottom line -- if you can squeeze in another 1-2 feet of space
you'll probably be happier. You'll also have a good point if/when
you come to the point of selling.
|
173.42 | CLOSET ORGANIZERS | AKOV11::GUNDEWAR | | Thu Apr 20 1989 10:09 | 13 |
| Our new house will just about be ready in 6-8 weeks time. Last week I met with
a representative of a closet company to work with them on organizing the closets
in the house, especially the ones in the bedroom. Their estimates came out to
be $1000/- for each closet, the master bedroom (his and hers) and the 3 other
bedrooms. I thought this was a little too much since the shelves are only
painted particle boards.
What do you all think of the estimates? Can I do something like this myself?
Is there a kit or some such available? What tools would I need? As you can
probably tell from these questions I am a novice "DIY" and am not afraid to give
it a shot, especially if you kind folks would guide me.
Thanx in advance.
|
173.43 | $1000 each? *choak* | POOL::BUFORD | Ohayo, y'all! | Thu Apr 20 1989 10:28 | 17 |
| What's that particle board made of? Teak? Shreaded dollar bills?
Check out just about any home improvement store or even the large
department stores. You should find literally a dozen closet organizer
kits ranging from $25 to $250.
If you want to get creative, check out a book store or your library for
a book on storage projects. You'll probably find a book with plans,
materials lists, even a section on tools and their use.
Don't forget the KISS principle. My "closet organizer" consists of
the standard pole-and-shelf you normally see in closets plus two units
of those wire baskets on wheels. (Each unit has 3 wire basket drawers.)
Total cost was around $85.
John B.
|
173.44 | I had the same reaction as you.... | AKOV11::GUNDEWAR | | Thu Apr 20 1989 10:40 | 15 |
| RE: -1.
Yes, $1000/- per closet. And my reaction was the same as yours. I didn't pay
as much as their combined amount for my kitchen counters - and those are made
of Corian!!!
Basically, what their plans/design for each closet outlined was a combination
of racks, shelves, and drawers from top to bottom. Once completed they look
pretty neat as everything has its own place etc.
The regular closets with a simple rod and one shelf over it can get pretty messy
and overloaded sometimes and hence I was looking for the organizers.
Thanx for your suggestions, I am going to check out some stores. I just knew
there had to be a better and cheaper way to get what I want.
|
173.45 | | REGENT::MERSEREAU | | Thu Apr 20 1989 10:45 | 9 |
|
When I first read your note, I thought you said $1000 for all of
them. After reading .1 I realized, that you meant $5000!
For $5000, you could buy some damn nice hardwood plus some good
power tools to boot. I'd definitely DIY!
-tm
|
173.46 | | WMOIS::VAINE | Are we having fun yet? | Thu Apr 20 1989 11:26 | 9 |
| If you can get hold of a JC Penney catalog you can buy whatever
components you wish and DIY. Just looking at the displays in the
book will give you ideas. I would guess that Sears would have something
similar if that's your only choice.
Lynn
|
173.47 | cost(shelves) > cost(contents) | SELECT::REINSCHMIDT | DLB12-2/D8, DTN 291-8114 | Thu Apr 20 1989 12:02 | 3 |
| The stuff in my closet isn't worth $1000.
Marlene
|
173.48 | | BOSTON::SWIST | Jim Swist BXO 224-1699 | Thu Apr 20 1989 12:11 | 12 |
| This is the latest fleece-the-yuppies by inventing solutions and
by implication convincing consumers that they indeed have a problem.
Custom closet design is big business these days.
BTW, the DIY stuff is not immune from the phenomenon. "Closet maid"
and other such modular stuff is basically made of plastic coated
steel wire which cost mimimally to produce. By the time you buy
shelf A, bracket B, fasteners C, widget D, etc in any quantity,
you will be spending more than you think (certainly more than it
looks like it's worth). But of course you will still beat $1000/closet
by a long shot.
|
173.49 | | WMOIS::VAINE | Are we having fun yet? | Thu Apr 20 1989 13:40 | 11 |
| Talking to a friend who went the Penney's route she spent less than
$80 per closet. (this is your standard double-door closet found
in newer homes) I saw the stuff and it looks like that particle
board-type stuff(sorry can't be technical and eat lunch at the same
time). Ithought it looked ok, sturdy,etc. Apparently the components
are on sale now, giving a discount for 5 or more items purchased
in an order. If I ever feel the need to get "organized" I'll buy
from them.
Lynn
|
173.50 | Thanx | AKOV11::GUNDEWAR | | Thu Apr 20 1989 14:07 | 3 |
| re. previous reply
Thanx, Lynn. I will check JC Penny out this evening.
|
173.51 | I like Closet Maid kits | PLANET::MARCHETTI | Mama said there'd be days like this. | Thu Apr 20 1989 14:31 | 21 |
| re Closet Maid kits
I just installed 4 of these kits in my new addition. Kmart and
others often have sales on these and we got ours for about $30 each,
average. One of them was for 10 ft long closet, the others were
for 5-8 foot closets.
While you may think these are overpriced, I found them to be real
timesavers (and that's worth something). The kits all have good
instructions, come with drilling templates, and even a phillips
head bit for your drill. They have an 800 number to call for help
or parts (I was missing a few fasteners and they sent them right
out).
If someone is inexperienced or only moderately handy, these kits
would be a good solution. Even though I'm capable of designing
and building my own units, I had these kits installed in less time
than it would have taken me to design something. Never mind running
around getting the materials, etc.
Bob
|
173.52 | Closet-Tech of Shrewsbury was reasonable | RAIN::WATSON | | Fri Apr 21 1989 10:54 | 14 |
| We had Closetech of Shrewsbury, MA design 1 closet for us last year.
It cost about $500 and was definitely worth it. The closet is
a walk-in style, and has a partially slanted roof (Cape house).
They made excellent use of the space. We have 2 long-hang areas,
a large double hang area, 4 shelves, and 2 long shelves. It's portable
in the sense that if we move, we can take it with us.
While I wouldn't recommend spending this much for an ordinary shaped closet,
I am happy that we did it with this one.
I'm not sure I spelled the company's name accurately, but they
advertise in the Worcester newspaper.
Robin
|
173.53 | try Grossmans | AKOV75::LAVIN | Oh, It's a profit deal | Fri Apr 21 1989 11:11 | 1 |
| Grossmans puts the wire type stuff on sale often.
|
173.54 | Cheap solution for six-footers! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Apr 21 1989 12:15 | 9 |
| The smartest closet thing we ever did in our house was to put a second,
higher shelf above the original shelf in each closet (had the
lumberyard cut up the plywood - a whole sheet won't fit in or on my
tiny car anyhow); it took one evening to install the additional shelves
(in four closets; it's a small house). The added shelves plus the
drawers under our platform bed pretty much take care of most of the
"overflow".
This won't help much if you are not very tall, though!
|
173.55 | another vote for the "closet maid" type organizers | LDYBUG::ARRAJ | | Fri Apr 21 1989 13:33 | 11 |
| RE: .9
I second the recommendation for Closet Maid ( and some other
manufacturer with a similar product, whose name escapes me at the
moment ) for ease of installation and efficient closet organization.
We've done two 7 1/2 foot closets so far. We have a 12 foot closet
that we'd like to do now. The delimma is whether to get one 10 ft
unit of two 5 - 8 ft units. For $30. on sale, though, I would say
this organizer is definitely worth it.
Valerie
|
173.56 | a well organized closet is heaven!!! | DEMING::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Fri Apr 21 1989 21:42 | 22 |
|
Have a ball and maybe combine the plastic coated wire system with
the particle board units.....another trick is to get the heavey
cardboard shelves and put on the floor under the racks for all
your shoes. I fit two pairs in each cubie hole and two sets
of shelves fit side by side with nine compartments each! REAL
closet stretcher/utilization of space.
My dream would be to have a whole room devoted to clothes. I
am a clothes-aholic!
You really can organize closets real cheap at Zayres, Bradleys,
Mars, Caldors, etc when they have sales....even full price they
are a bargain compared to the closet houses.
Good luck and happy arranging. Another thing to think of getting
to stretch your space are the hangers that hold six shirts/blouses,
the hangers that hold six skirts, the hangers that hold four pants/
slacks, and the hanger for belts. These all do their job in the
space of one hanger!
justme....jacqui
|
173.57 | | NETMAN::SEGER | this space intentionally left blank | Mon Apr 24 1989 13:34 | 10 |
| re: 2nd shelves
I agree these are a super space saver. BUT - for all those who insists on
following the electrical code to the letter, these are illegal since there's
a minimum space requirement between the bulb and the shelf.
I guess the theory is if the shelf is too high some bozo will pile their stuff
up to the ceiling and touch the bulb - hence a fire hazard.
-mark
|
173.58 | | WILKIE::THOMS | Ross - 264-6457 | Mon Apr 24 1989 14:21 | 14 |
| >a minimum space requirement between the bulb and the shelf.
Yeah, There is a minimum space requirement:
See NEC 410-8. Fixtures in Clothes Closets.
Basically it says maintain 18 inches of clearance between fixture and storage
area. Flush, recessed and fluorescent fixtures must have at least 6 inches of
clearance.
BTW, Most local codes also require globe or flush fixtures in closets.
No pendants.
Ross
|
173.59 | I don't HAVE lights in my closets | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Apr 25 1989 13:41 | 4 |
| None of my closets have lights inside them anyways. Nor do they really
need to: none of the closets are more than about 18" deep, and the
light from the room outside each one is plenty to see the closet
contents.
|
173.60 | California Closet Co. | LEDE05::SIVANANJAIAH | | Wed Apr 26 1989 13:17 | 15 |
|
I found an interesting Ad in Boston Globe from a company called
California Closet Company. Some of the highlights in the Ad are
o Custom design to fit your need.
o 1 day installation (Free consultation and estimate in your
home).
o Custom DIY kits.
o Electric carousels available, and some more.
Has anybody tried stuff from these people ??????????
Nagi.
|
173.61 | Might be a good toy for the kids too! | VINO::GRANSEWICZ | Which way to Tahiti? | Mon May 01 1989 12:52 | 11 |
|
RE: .-1
> o Electric carousels available, and some more.
Do they also sell the electric shoe elevator? It's just getting
too hard to bend down to pickup those shoes every morning... ;-)
Was this "electric carousel" for residential use? Not that I could
use one in my 2 foot closets!
|
173.62 | Amazing stuff, and cheap too. | TALLIS::GOYKHMAN | | Tue Jul 25 1989 17:52 | 9 |
| I bought a wire closet organizer kit at IKEA for $19,
an extra 2ft shelf at Som. Lumber for $3.69, plus some extra strong
wall fittings for about $5. Did an 8ft closet in half a day, and
really doubled the amount of stuff that fit. You can do your own
design after looking at some "storage ideas" books in the library,
and customize for under $100 per closet easy. Plus, it's really easy
to do, and I am not too handy to begin with.
DG
|
173.63 | | NRADM::KING | It shouldn't hurt to be a child!!!!!!! | Wed Jul 26 1989 09:09 | 6 |
| Ther is a new store in Leominster called the Closetworks. Its
located in the Wood building on Main street. I highly recommend
the store for some really great ideas on different ways to organize
any closet you may want!
REK
|
173.64 | re .18 California closet | WESTVW::LEE | Another box of manuals! In what bookcase? | Fri Aug 11 1989 18:16 | 36 |
| I used them to add space to two closets in my (at the time)
1 bedroom condominium. It was three years ago, so my memory may be
a little fuzzy.
I called up an made an appointment for someone to come over
and make an estimate.
I had already had ideas, and a couple of sketches. I tried very hard,
before the salesman showed up, to understand what I needed.
Also, the project was DIY.
When he came over we talked about needs, and he explained
what could and couldn't be done. He took some measurements. They
were very willing to customize the length of the shelves to fit
my needs. As I recall the width of the organizers are standard.
Of course, he made an estimate. The appointment took about
a half hour.
That particular saleman was polite, and wasn't pushy.
The product was available when they said (I picked up the
organizers) and they fit into the closets like a glove. There was
only 1 miscut shelf, and they glady replaced it.
I liked the product. It was a good investment. I really needed the
space when I got married and my wife's clothes moved in!
I think DIY saved 50% or so off the installed cost. I paid
$400 ($450?) for two closets (9 linear feet total, divided into
5 shelf columns) and increased closet space by a quadzillion, well
maybe a factor of 4.
I'd do it again, if there weren't so many other home improvements
to take care of first.
dave
|
173.65 | TRU-SPACE Closets | ODIXIE::WATSONPH | | Tue May 21 1991 10:52 | 5 |
| I'm looking for a company called 'TRU-SPACE' that specializes in wood
laminate storage system for closets. Any help locating the company
would be appreciated.
Phil
|
173.66 | Phone # | 33972::WATSONPH | | Tue May 28 1991 16:41 | 1 |
| I found the phone number forTRU-SPACE this weekend, its 419-352-4455.
|
173.22 | Kneewall Closet with Sliders? | WMOIS::FERRARI_G | | Mon Feb 17 1992 09:13 | 17 |
| This note seems to fit....
The roof has a 12/12 pitch, thus I end up with kneewalls in both
upstairs bedrooms. Since it's a relatively small house, and I haven't
started on a playroom, we need more space to at least store the kids
toys, etc. Anyway, the kneewalls are currently used as closets.
However, there's only one swinging door, and you've got to crawl about
6 feet to get to the far end.
What I'd like to do, is tear out the 4 foot door and wall, and put in
4' sliders, so the entire closet could be opened up for easier access.
The width of the closet shouldn't be a problem, the question I've got
is around the height...Can sliders be easily cut down to about 4' high?
It seems simple enough...A small header, tracks, and the sliders. Any
potential problems/pros and cons would be appreciated.
|
173.23 | bifolds work better? | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Wed Feb 19 1992 07:02 | 6 |
|
If is a cheep hollow core slider door, you might have to rework it.
or, you could always make a slider door yourself. I've seen a
nice setup using a bi-fold door system.
JD
|
173.67 | Converting a Closet into a Desk/Work area | CARTUN::GYOUNG | | Fri Sep 17 1993 18:19 | 13 |
| I'm converting the guest bedroom into a study. We'll put in a
hidabed couch for those times when another bed is needed, but
we could really use a place for the computer/reading room/homework.
I want to make the closet into a desk/work area. I can't find any
reference in here for this type of work.
Anyone have experience doing this ?
Thanks,
Greg
|
173.68 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sun Sep 19 1993 22:01 | 29 |
| My uncle designed something clever along this line which he had
built for his study, which you could adapt for a closet. I'll try
to draw it.
-----------
|
| cabinet
| space
|
|
| top
-----------+_________________+
| |
more | |-
cabinets | |
| | leg
The two "+" are piano hinges. The "top" and "leg" pieces are hinged so
that they fold up (using a handle where I have the "-") into the
cabinet. When folded down, they make a desk. (The hinge for the leg
is arranged such that when folded down it hits against the top when it
gets to the 90 degree angle, so it doesn't collapse.) When folded up,
it just looks like another cabinet door. He has his PC monitor on
a swing-arm inside the cabinet and he lifts out his keyboard for use.
I hope I have described this well enough for you to get the idea. I
think it would work well in a closet, too.
Steve
|
173.69 | Spur shelving? | SMURF::WALTERS | | Mon Sep 20 1993 09:52 | 18 |
|
Another thing you might consider is the "Spur" brand of modular
shelving. The supports are coated steel and take about 180lb when
screwed to a stud. Home depot has some laminated pine shelving that's
about 1" thick and varying widths up to 32" which makes a good
"desktop". You can use different widths & lengths of laminated particle
board to make shelves, terminal supports etc. above the desktop. It was
about $55 to install this in an alcove to make a PC work area:
36x30 "desktop"
2 36x10 shelves
3 24" spurs
6 8" spurs
3 36" shelf supports.
Colin
|