When planning a renovation, it’s tempting to shout, “More storage!” and fill every wall with cupboards. But storage by itself isn’t the goal – useful storage is. If you don’t first understand what you really need to store, you’ll either under-plan or overbuild bulky units that make spaces feel cramped.
Spending a bit of time listing categories – clothes, linens, files, luggage, kitchenware, cleaning supplies, kids’ stuff – gives you a realistic picture. Measure a few things too: how many long coats, how many big cooking pots, how many suitcases? That helps decide hanging space versus shelves, drawer depth, and cupboard height.
Sometimes, you discover you don’t actually need more storage; you need better organisation of existing space. Other times, you realise you need fewer full-height wardrobes and more shallow cabinets.
When you design storage around real, counted possessions, the result feels tailored instead of random. You avoid expensive, giant cupboards with half-empty shelves – and rooms that suddenly feel smaller for no good reason.
