If you live in an apartment where you can’t make permanent changes or in a 60-year-old house with 4″-thick plaster-and-lathe walls that make finding the wall studs impossible like I do, you may have thought a wall organizer unit and desk like the one in the photo was impossible for you. Usually this type of setup requires you to screw the metal uprights into the wall studs, but elfa solves the problems I have with their free-standing line. I was looking at The Container Store‘s online site when I found the elfa shelving catalog. You could design a wall-mounted unit or free-standing unit online, but I decided to let someone at the nearby Container Store location do the dirty work for me.
I knew how I wanted my desk to look, so I took my rough sketch to the Raleigh store, and Anissa helped me fine-tune my ideas. For example, while a 20″-deep shelf works well for the desktop, the shelves above should be only about 12″-deep to allow headroom and light for working at the desk. Anissa handled designing the unit after we had finalized all the details, let me approve the design, and then sent us out for lunch while she pulled all the parts. An hour later, we went back to the store, and someone brought everything out and helped us load up the car. All the shelves, the metal uprights, and the feet for the unit were either in boxes or wrapped in plastic to protect them until they were installed. The hardware and other smaller pieces were stored in a couple of re-usable non-woven bags with the elfa logo.
Construction of the unit took about 15 minutes; it was greatly simplified by the personalized instruction booklet that was printed out just for my design. There are also some instructional videos online; I found the one for installing the stabilization crossbars to be “worth a thousand words.” The only tools required were a mallet to hammer the top supports in and the tiny, included aluminum wrench to adjust the levelers on the feet. Everything else just clicked together by hand, and the hardest part was making sure we put the shelf supports at the same position on each upright. (We just counted positions on each post.) It was a two-person job, not because the parts were all that heavy or because it was difficult, but simply because you needed someone to hold the uprights… well, upright… while the top support was hammered in.
My original unit included only the center section with the drawers and the desk section seen on the right. After we got it installed, my husband started pining for a desk of his own. I simply used the parts list to go online and order the parts I needed to add the left desk section. I could have had them shipped to my house, but I instead had the Raleigh store pull everything for me. It’s a 1.5 hour drive, so everything was ready for me when I got there. It took only a few minutes to add the second desk to the already assembled unit.
After using everything for a few days, I placed another order (that I did have shipped to me) with another set of integrated bookends, a few back stop bars to prevent things from falling off the back of the shelves, and a couple of plastic storage boxes to organize pens, markers, and similar small things in the mesh drawers. I’ve tried every method possible for purchasing elfa products from The Container Store now.
The entire desk unit wasn’t cheap, but I feel it was very reasonably priced. The original two-section unit with one desk and the drawer unit was about $620. I added the second desk unit and an extra 8″-deep shelf for the knee space under my desk for $175. All the back stop bars, bookends, and three plastic storage boxes added another $35 to the cost of the unit. The quality of the components make me think I’ll be using this unit for many, many years to come. The unit looks nice in my mid-century modern-style room, and it certainly cost less than an original George Nelson wall unit would have, assuming I could have even found one for sale.
The only thing I’d change about the unit would be a small tweak to the mesh drawers. You can see in the picture that the drawers don’t hide the contents, and you can see that my “junk” doesn’t lend itself to neat arrangements in the drawers. I wish you could add a wood or metal front to the drawers to disguise the mess inside.
I have added some other organizational items to the shelves, some I already had and some I purchased. You’ll also see I’ve added some decorative items and even some Orb Audio speakers to my upper shelves. The top drawer has an expanding acrylic organizer for pencils and the like, and I used some 3M Command cable guides on backs of the uprights and shelves to keep all the cables and power cords organized. The two desk chairs are the Flat Bungee Office Chair with Arms, also from the Container Store.
I love the look of the elfa desk unit I built, and can’t imagine how it could be better suited for my needs.
Filed in categories: Home, Kitchen, News
Tagged: Computer furniture, DIY
Build an organized home office without permanently modifying the room originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on June 17, 2013 at 12:00 pm.
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