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Morgan's DIY Plumbing Pipe Shelving

Morgan of The Brick House is undoubtedly talented: a stylish home, really excellent blog and the creation of a wonderful, DIY bookshelf pulled together for - get ready - around $200. This wall-size unit would be impressive no matter what, but...

 
 

...when you figure in the do-able budget, accessibility of the materials (basic plumbing pipes/fittings and pine planks) and the sturdiness of the finished piece, it is elevated to a DIY masterpiece.

It reminds of us of our friends Shannon & Emmett's shelves which they made from plumbing parts and old stair treads, which is another favorite (inspirational!) project.

Click on over to The Brick House for the how-to - including a full supply list and other details.

Thanks, Morgan!

Images: Morgan/The Brick House

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How To..., green ideas, inspiration, The Brick House

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Comments (23)

I'm totally doing this! It would solve my broken bookcase problem and is just stylish!

posted by calderonlm on October 6th 2009 at 9:02pm
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That is surprisingly attractive.

posted by heatherdazy on October 6th 2009 at 9:52pm
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oooooh this is nice!

posted by CozyLittleCave on October 6th 2009 at 10:14pm
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Ooooh, I remember when I first saw these and loved them. Thanks for reminding me!

posted by Jesse Lu on October 6th 2009 at 10:31pm
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Great! One question. When you stated that you drilled holes in the wood so the pipe would fit through, are you talking specifically the 90 deg pieces nearest the sheetrock?

posted by leehou on October 6th 2009 at 10:42pm
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i really like this. sort of looks like a spider climbing up the wall. somehow it plays really well with the rug, too...

has anyone else tried this?

kelly
http://tearinguphouses.blogspot.com

posted by k51279 on October 7th 2009 at 1:42am
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This blog ROCKS!

posted by JoJenks on October 7th 2009 at 5:23am
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I really like this. maybe is the painted plumbing that makes this DIY awesome. Well done, very well done. bravo.
joel

posted by joel maria pirela on October 7th 2009 at 6:59am
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I think I finally see what they mean by "intelligent design" ! Brilliant job. Somehow it manages to be stylish and unobtrusive at the same time. And simultaneously modest and impressive. You've performed a bit of magic. Bravo.

posted by mirandabee on October 7th 2009 at 8:41am
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I've been in love with this since I saw Todd Oldham create desks for his office out of flange pipes and wood planks on "House of Style" way back in the day.

It's inexpensive, looks expensive and very, very industrial modern!!!!! LOVES!

posted by jeffnyc on October 7th 2009 at 8:44am
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The runner's geometry and the shelves' rectilinear meets curvilinear form go so well together!! I like the shelf better with the carpet there. . .

posted by LydiaKutko on October 7th 2009 at 9:49am
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Genius - and so much better than a group of crappy Billy bookcases!

posted by bepsf on October 7th 2009 at 10:57am
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I loooove this. Unfortunately I don't have the wherewithal to do it myself!

posted by CallDoctorBison on October 7th 2009 at 12:01pm
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Can't believe I missed this yesterday. AWESOME.

posted by sally305 on October 8th 2009 at 6:20am
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My husband made a desk that looks just like this! It was more difficult than we thought because you have to consider which direction the threading will go on the pipe pieces.

We opted for a butcher block top from ikea.

posted by JulieLeanne on October 8th 2009 at 12:03pm
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My husband had this exact idea for shelves for his home office! He just has yet to execute it.

(I showed him this post, and he said "They stole my idea!" LOL)

posted by KiraArts on October 9th 2009 at 4:41pm
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Great. Nothing transforms a room like floor to ceiling custom shelving.

I'm handy, but I have a minimal selection of power tools and wonder how easy the holes are to cut-- they used a drill to cut 'em?

As I understand the instructions, it's anchored only to the wall from the topmost pipes. Or, is it necessary to use screws on the floor, as well? I never hesitate to mount things on the wall-- if I want to change it down the line, repairing the wall is easy. I'd think twice before screwing into my wood floor, though.

Having attractive shelves cut at the lumber yard is easier said than done-- pine is generally the only solid wood available, and it's a rather loathsome, knotty wood. Finished birch plywood, a la the Eames? Never quite works for me-- the plywood striping on the edges is never dense enough to leave visible (there are inevitably "gaps" in the striping, leaving it looking crude and rough). Where does one buy high-grade plywood?

posted by shirley-temple-of-doom on October 11th 2009 at 11:24am
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@shirley: If you have a powered screwdriver or drill, then its fairly easy to find a circle cutter set at any hardware store. They are the set that are generally used to cut the openings for doorknobs.

As for wood to use, maybe getting shelves from another place would do the trick. Places like ikea and the container store sell finished shelves that could easily be re-purposed for this.

posted by Jose A on October 11th 2009 at 11:44am
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Circle cutter set, eh? Guess my power drill has wondrous hidden abilities I've never explored. Thanks.

Ikea & Container store shelves are "meh"/ okay, but one is then obliged to design around their standard sizes.

Regarding plywood, and its unsatisfactory striping: I wonder if one could successfully fill the raggedy stripes with a wood filler, then sand well & finish? (Note to self: experiment with this technique!)

posted by shirley-temple-of-doom on October 11th 2009 at 12:26pm
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use wood "Tape" veneers for edging that usually has adhesive on the back that you iron on to the wood's edge. (also comes in glue it yourself) Many types of wood veneers available for contrast to the shelf color if you want.

You will need a specialized edge trimmer (a straight knife or box cutter is asking for trouble.) (trying to fix one edge perfect is asking for design trouble and not worth the sweat) Invest in the basic special cutter and save your sanity and/or a trip to the emergency room. You also might find one for rent at a hardware/tool rental place. Maybe a woodworkers co-op or something....

posted by cheep3r5 on October 12th 2009 at 6:26pm
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link on wood edge tape...

Ron Hazelton DIY
http://www.ronhazelton.com/archives/tips/Wood_Edge_Tape.shtm

posted by cheep3r5 on October 12th 2009 at 6:27pm
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I'm familiar with and have used veneer tape (to "hide" those unsightly edges).

While it's the best solution I've found so far, something about it rubs me the wrong way-- the veneer tape is ersatz trickery to hide a bad aspect of my shelf design.

It seems as dishonest as a toupee over a bald spot, if you get my drift.

Dense well-made plywood, showing the cut edges, would be preferable.

posted by shirley-temple-of-doom on October 13th 2009 at 10:17am
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This goes on the list of things that I love but just won't work in my house. Sigh.

posted by sasharenee on October 16th 2009 at 8:33pm
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