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Best Product: Inexpensive Industrial Shelving

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We've always liked the look of classic warehouse shelving. With a strong, basic shape and simple palette (they're usually powder coated in black or grey), these shelves work in almost any setting.

We spotted this photo of Abby Low's apartment (originally photographed for Design*Sponge) over at one of our new favorite blogs, Books At Home, and wanted to share a few resources.

 
 

In New York, there are companies who will manufacture these systems, in much sturdier versions, to your needs. B&Z Steel on Greene Street comes to mind. While these are still realitively inexpensive, they're not quite $30 inexpensive, which is the going rate for a similar product available at both Kmart and Walmart. Costco also sells a version by Tennsco, which we hear is more solidly built, but is also more expensive.

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Have you or anyone you know used these shelves? The customer reviews on both the Walmart and Kmart sites lean towards the positive, usually with the caveat that the system is quite flimsy but still holds up. We're curious to know how functional these, as the price looks pretty unbeatable.

Tags

shelving & storage, value, books, industrial

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Comments (19)

they look good to me. I can see taking what they have there and then doing wood shelves in a really nice wood and taking it up to the next level. Just buy some raw wood, cut it to size and stain, lacquer or whatever. When i have spare room for thing like this i'll check it all out/

posted by jmorey on December 4th 2008 at 4:15pm
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I enjoy the look of these -

I saw this idea in a design book/magazine way back in the early 80's and used Garage Shelving as a Media Center/bookshelves in my very first apartment 25 years ago...

...that was the same apartment where I purchased 6' long by 24" deep restaurant shelving and a great length of maple butcherblock and created my own huge Kitchen Island for relatively little money.

posted by bepsf on December 4th 2008 at 4:23pm
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I have one from Lowe's in the garage. Very sturdy, cost about $60.

posted by cathrobi on December 4th 2008 at 4:23pm
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We actually use them for basement storage but since we are broke and need living room storage we are planning to move two of them up there. Very sturdy, bought at Home Depot. I forget the price but I think it was maybe $60 (so no, not $30 cheap). I do like the look.

posted by outonalimb_2008 on December 4th 2008 at 4:35pm
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The ones from Wal-Mart (like those pictured right) are incredibly flimsy. My husband's vocabulary during assembly was more colorful than usual, and we had to screw our three units into the wall for added stability because they wouldn't be very safe (especially around children) if they were just free standing. They were only $30 a piece for us, but for a long term product, we should have spent more for the ones at Lowe's. Wal-Mart's seem more like aluminum than steel.

posted by Mamaring on December 4th 2008 at 5:10pm
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Oh, and even though we bought all three units at the same time, 2 sets of shelves have a nice, sanded finish on the tops and edges, but one set is very rough and unfinished. We should have taken it back but they were such a PITA to assemble that we decided against it.

posted by Mamaring on December 4th 2008 at 5:16pm
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I got some from Triboro in Williamsburg. Quite reasonable and customizable. Nice people there too. Only drawback is the charcoal gray powder coat color.

posted by Sam H on December 4th 2008 at 5:27pm
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I really like the look of a very industrial piece like this in a modern space - sort of adds a very raw element of design.

posted by TyceH on December 4th 2008 at 5:36pm
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My in-laws have the Costco shelves in their basement. Very sturdy. I hadn't thought of it as a decor item before, but that photo from Design*Sponge looks pretty great.

posted by Lisa Hunter (Montreal) on December 4th 2008 at 6:02pm
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I used to have industrial shelves in my bedroom for years but moved them out when I wanted to give the room a warmer feel. But the good thing is that those shelves are always useful and super sturdy (now used in basement for storage). Got mine from Home Depot for $60 or $80. If I had to use them again, I'd probably paint them a fun color.

Actually had a question about the rug. I've been eyeing similar one at Pottery Barn but wonder if they're scratchy. Anyone know?

posted by azure on December 4th 2008 at 6:23pm
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I wouldn't get the walmart one. I don't have these shelves, but every piece of furniture I bought from Walmart has ended in disaster. Flimsy, cheap, terrible stuff.

posted by idiotdogbrain on December 4th 2008 at 8:58pm
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Love the idea of hacking these with nicer wooden shelves. I've done something similar with Ikeas wire/board shelves (not on their website any more)

posted by Modfan on December 4th 2008 at 11:09pm
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We used one of these in an alcove between the bedroom and living room. Covered the plywood with felt grey fabric so it looked better. The shelves can hold a lot of weight, so the bottom one had our 40 gallon aquarium, and the middle one the entertainment center with the TV on a lazy susan so we could watch it in both rooms. It was indestructible, and really nice to have these elements shared in both rooms.

posted by FJ!! on December 5th 2008 at 8:09am
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The shelves do become sturdier with more weight on them. If you were "just putting a few decorative objects on them
and maybe your Harry Potter books, they might seem a little wobbly" -- as Books At Home mentions -- and I agree.

They are great for serious book collections and deep enough that you can go 2 rows of books deep if you have the need.

We actually bought 3 sets of the Walmart fashion so that we could add more shelves to the double set in our living room. With the leftovers that we didn't use from the third set we were able to make a short (half the original height) shelf for our bedroom.

All-in-all, a great deal.

-Abby Low

posted by ALOW on December 5th 2008 at 9:36am
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I have three of these shelves from Wal-Mart, which I bought about three years ago. They fit perfectly in an alcove in the living/dining room of my apt. They are pretty flimsy, and were a bit of a pain to assemble. The little tabs on the metal shelf supports were tricky to insert just right. They were wobbly when empty, but definitely are more sturdy once they are loaded with books and boxes. The shelves are deep, so you can put two layers of books, and on some shelves I store boxes of art supplies and holiday stuff in boxes behind a layer of books.

If I ever move, I will definitely reuse them in a garage or studio, if they survive being disassembled. I'd definitely recommend them to anyone on a very tight budget who needs lots of vertical storage. (And I love the idea of covering the shelves with felt!)

posted by SaraJane417 on December 6th 2008 at 1:15pm
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if you are in NYC you can get great industrial shelves made to size/order and offered in battle ship gray, white or red -- at Davids Office Equipment Inc 327 Canal St New York. I had an odd little nook that I had to use/fill so I went in with the measurements and paid maybe only $100 for a 9 foot high, 2 foot wide shelf - so pleased with them I also had another one created as a tv/media 'bench' for my wonky shaped living room.

posted by pdesign on December 6th 2008 at 2:01pm
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Linen N Things is going out of business here in Austin (and I'm sure many other places) and they are selling their shelving. Their pieces are more of the wire style industrial shelving though.

posted by kambykitten on December 7th 2008 at 9:08am
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I haven't had that type, but I used the metal shelf type that bolt together. $10-15 at Walmart. They're a major pain to put together, but incredibly sturdy if you bolt them together (and use every single brace! no shortcuts!). I cut the standards down a bit, which made them look less like standard garage furniture. And I still use them in my basement, long after I've moved up in the furniture world a bit.

posted by superbeetle on December 7th 2008 at 10:23am
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I have bought quite heavy duty battleship grey steel shelving in semi customizable sizes from Tri-Boro Shelving in Brooklyn. They support a LOT of weight and dont look bad. The only draw back is very obnoxious assembly involving heavy pounding (which has drawn my landords attention from 4 floors below.

posted by Sam H on December 26th 2008 at 12:20pm
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