Zoning small German apartments
How to divide one- and two-room flats into working zones without permanent walls or losing the deposit.
Read the guideHome organization · Germany
Bright Corner House collects practical reading on space zoning, storage systems, and tidying methods adapted to German homes and rented apartments — from compact Altbau flats to houses with a Keller.
Where to begin
Most clutter problems trace back to the same handful of causes. These principles run through every guide on the site.
Decide what each part of a room is for — sleeping, working, drying laundry — before buying any furniture. Storage that ignores zoning tends to migrate into the wrong rooms.
Daily items belong at arm's height; seasonal and rarely-used things move to upper shelves or the Keller. The further an item is used, the further it can travel.
A shelf, drawer, or box left deliberately empty absorbs the inevitable temporary overflow without forcing a reshuffle of everything around it.
Guides
Three longer pieces, each focused on a different part of the home.
How to divide one- and two-room flats into working zones without permanent walls or losing the deposit.
Read the guide
Building a workable wardrobe in homes where fitted closets are rare and the freestanding Kleiderschrank rules.
Read the guide
Keeping a basement compartment dry, labelled, and genuinely usable instead of a place things disappear into.
Read the guideMethod
A walk-in closet, a pantry shelf, and a drawer all solve the same problem at different scales: putting the right things within reach of the activity that needs them. The aim is not a showroom but a room that stays ordered after a normal week.
Regional notes
Storage habits differ across Germany because the housing stock does. A few recurring patterns worth keeping in mind.
High ceilings in older buildings in cities such as Berlin and Leipzig allow tall wardrobes and upper shelves, but rooms often lack built-in closets, so freestanding units do the work.
Single-family homes frequently include a basement compartment used for seasonal goods, bicycles, and preserves. Damp control matters more here than in the living floors.
Contact
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Editorial contact: editor@brightcornerhouse.eu