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Building a compact geekroom?
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shponglefan:
I have a spare room in my house I've started renovating.  It used to be my main computer room, but for awhile now has mainly been used for storage.  I'd like to re-purpose it and make it a multi-functional, useful space again.

Part of my ideas are driven by a fascination with tiny spaces (tiny apartments, tiny houses, and ).

The overall room is 9x16 feet, plus two closets.  However, I'm thinking about subdividing it down to 9x10 feet (plus closets).  The pictures below show a possible layout; the white wall to the bottom is where I'd have to build a new wall to subdivide the room.

The idea is to cram in a computer area, music station, art/misc work area, big screen TV + media center, mini fridge (maybe), and twin-sized bed.  I want the room to become a cozy, creative refuge from the busy world where I can just focus on my primary interests, leaving only for bathroom breaks.

Below is a possible layout, again with the new temporary wall in white. 





I'm also primarily inspired by cyberpunk themed spaces and decor.  In terms of furnishing, lighting and overall mood, I'd hope to capture some of the below in designing this.







Thoughts, feedback, comments?
shponglefan:
dble post
ark_ader:
I took over the master bedroom closet and put everything in there.  IKEA sells some nice closet space.  You need separation from your office/gaming room and your bedroom.  Having a bed in there will just make it easy to crash, and that can be problematic, unless you have visitors around, then it is a perfect place to run and hide in. :)

I like the steampunk idea. I don't know if it would get too much for such a small room.  For me white walls and no cables does it.  If anything make it like Flynn's basement.  Complete with touchscreen keyboard and a laser particle beam.  Make it look early 80s complete with dust and cobwebs (like my first office).  You can get that brick looking wallpaper....

http://cdn.collider.com/wp-content/uploads/Flynns-Arcade-Comic-Con-2010-Tron-Legacy-13.jpg
BadMouth:

--- Quote from: shponglefan on February 12, 2017, 12:04:17 am ---However, I'm thinking about subdividing it down to 9x10 feet (plus closets).  The pictures below show a possible layout; the white wall to the bottom is where I'd have to build a new wall to subdivide the room.

--- End quote ---

My home office is only 8x11.5 and my guest bedroom is 9x11.5.  They've both been my bedroom at some point in time.

I've found that shared use open space in the center of the room makes the place feel larger.
While I do have a full size bed centered in the guest room, since your room is dual purpose I'd recommend pushing the bed against the side wall.
It will give you more visual space and you won't feel crowded when you back up your desk chair.

Futons suck.  All futons suck.  Don't be tempted to get one to serve dual purpose as a couch and bed.

In my home office, I currently have a 2ft deep laminated desk surface that runs the full 11.5' length of the room.
It is supported by a cleat on the back and sides and has a couple plain square table legs on the front that divide it into 3 sections.
The far section has storage bins and a file cabinet under it, the middle section has the desk chair and pc tower, the near section has drawing stuff and a smaller chair.
You could do something like that, then put an oversized couch opposite it.  One person could sleep comfortably on an oversized couch instead of having the bed.
You can get 10ft sections of countertop at home improvements stores, although I don't like the incorporated backsplash on a desk.

If you don't need sound isolation, in wall storage built into interior walls is awesome since it doesn't cut into the space of the room and extends it visually.
Since the wall you're building isn't load bearing, you can space the studs however you want.  Tall skinny sets of shelves that are taller than the doorways will visually stretch the room vertically and make it feel bigger.  You've got 3.5" studs + 1/2" drywall+3/4" finished face less 1/4" back=4.5" deep shelves while only intruding into the room 3/4".
Of course they can't be moved if you decide to rearrange the furniture.
BadMouth:


There's my desk in the 8x11 room in all it's messy glory.  The 3D printer is setting in the drawing area.  When I'm doing a bunch of 10 minute prints, I just bring the thing upstairs so I don't have to keep running down to the basement.
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