Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Flat Living and the Kitchen Puzzle
Flats across the UK are often designed with compact kitchens tucked into corners, alcoves or open plan reception rooms. The kitchen might be a galley behind a half wall, a strip along one side of a studio or a small enclosed room accessed through a single doorway. In each case, the furniture has to work harder than it would in a larger home, and a bar table is often the piece that does the most.
At Furniture in Fashion we see a consistent pattern in flat owners who choose bar tables. They want something that eats, works, entertains and stores, all from a single footprint.
Why Flats Favour the Raised Silhouette
A raised table reads as lighter than a standard dining table even when the physical footprint is similar. The legs stay visible, the under table area stays open and sightlines travel further across the room. In a flat where the kitchen sits next to or inside the living area, that sense of openness protects the lounge from feeling cluttered by kitchen furniture.
The height also changes how the room is used. A bar table encourages shorter, more casual sittings, which suits the rhythm of flat life where meals are sometimes eaten on the sofa, sometimes at the counter and sometimes standing up.
Shapes That Sit Well in Small Flats
Round tables tend to work beautifully in studios and small one bedroom flats because they remove corners from the traffic path. A 70cm to 80cm round top seats two to three people without blocking the walkway between kitchen and living zones.
Square tables with a pedestal base are another good option because the single central foot keeps stool positions flexible. Rectangular tables suit flats with a longer, narrower kitchen where a slim surface can run along the back wall. Our bar tables range includes all three shapes in dimensions intended for smaller rooms.
The Role of Stools in Flat Kitchens
Stools often decide whether a bar table succeeds or not. In a flat, stools need to do several things. They need to tuck fully under the table when not in use, they need to slide quietly on the floor so that neighbours below are not disturbed and they need to be comfortable enough for an entire meal.
Backless stools disappear beneath the table, which keeps the room visually quiet. Low back stools add support without taking up much more space. Our bar stools furniture collection includes both styles in padded and solid finishes.
Studio Flat Considerations
In a studio, the kitchen, dining and living functions all share one room. A bar table becomes the natural boundary between cooking and relaxing. Placed perpendicular to the kitchen counter, it acts as an island and a dining spot at the same time.
Lighting is a subtle but important element here. A single pendant hung low over the table anchors the dining zone, while the living area can keep its softer lamp light. The contrast in lighting layers does a lot of the work that walls would do in a larger flat.
One Bedroom Flats and Open Plan Kitchens
In a one bedroom flat, the kitchen is often semi open, separated from the living room by a low wall or a breakfast bar. A bar table aligned with that bar bridges the kitchen and lounge, creating continuity. The surface becomes a shared space for coffee, homework, laptops and evening drinks.
Materials matter in this context because the table is visible from the lounge. A considered finish in timber or glass reads as an extension of the living room rather than an outpost of the kitchen.
Storage Under and Around the Table
Flats rarely have generous storage, so any surface that can hold objects is welcome. Some bar tables include a lower shelf that can hold cookbooks, small appliances or storage baskets. Side hooks for tea towels or aprons are a quiet touch that helps keep the nearby counter clear.
Wall mounted tables fold away completely when not in use, which is a practical option in very small flats. They reappear at mealtimes and vanish the rest of the day.
Colour and Finish for Small Flats
Darker finishes can work in flats, but they need careful handling. A black gloss table next to a dark sofa can feel heavy. Lighter timbers and reflective surfaces tend to keep the room feeling roomy. If a bolder colour is chosen, it helps to balance it with pale walls, soft textiles and plenty of natural light.
Frequently Asked Questions
What size bar table suits a studio flat?
A round top of 70cm to 80cm or a rectangular top of around 100cm by 50cm tends to sit well in a studio without dominating the room.
Are bar tables noisy in flats with neighbours below?
Stool feet usually cause more noise than the table itself. Felt pads on the base of the stools reduce sound significantly.
Can a bar table be used as a work from home desk?
The height suits standing work and short seated sessions, but a dedicated desk is kinder for long days because the chair and surface relationship is more ergonomic.
Do bar tables block light in small flats?
Not usually. The raised profile and open frame let light pass underneath, which helps the room feel bright.

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