Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Furniture in Fashion Blog
Bringing Coffee Out of the Kitchen
A coffee bar does not have to live in the kitchen. Many UK homes are placing one in the living or dining room, where it becomes part of how the space is used through the day. In the morning it serves the household, and in the evening it can shift to drinks when friends are over. Setting one up away from the kitchen asks for a piece that looks like proper furniture, since it sits among sofas and dining chairs rather than worktops.
The idea works because it puts the ritual where you relax. Instead of standing in the kitchen, you make a coffee and stay in the room you actually want to be in.
Choosing a Cabinet That Looks the Part
In a living room, the coffee bar should sit comfortably beside your living room furniture and echo its tone. A sideboard with a clear top and closed storage hides the everyday clutter while giving you a surface for the machine. A drinks cabinet or serving trolley is a natural fit, since it was made to hold glassware and bottles and adapts easily to mugs and a coffee machine.
For a dining room, a longer piece can run along a wall and double as a serving station at mealtimes. Look at the sideboard options with deeper tops if you want room for both coffee in the morning and platters in the evening.
Planning the Layout
Position the cabinet near a socket and, ideally, within easy reach of the kitchen for water and milk. Keep the machine to one side so the rest of the top stays free for cups and a tray. Store beans and tools in a drawer, and reserve any open shelving for the pieces you are happy to have on show. A tidy arrangement keeps the bar feeling like a feature rather than a pile of equipment.
Think about flow through the room. The bar should be easy to approach without crossing in front of the television or squeezing past the dining table when chairs are pulled out.
Styling for a Relaxed Look
Because this piece lives in a social space, styling matters more than in a working kitchen. A framed print above the cabinet, a low plant and a set of matching cups create a calm display. A tray gathers the daily items so they read as intentional. In the evening, swapping a few mugs for glasses turns the same surface into a drinks station without any fuss, which is part of the appeal of a console table or slim cabinet in this role.
Keep the palette in step with the rest of the room. A coffee bar that picks up a cushion colour or a rug tone feels woven into the scheme rather than parked in it.
Making It Work for Guests
One of the quiet joys of a living or dining room coffee bar is how it changes the way you host. Guests can help themselves, conversation stays in the room and you are not disappearing to the kitchen between cups. A mobile trolley shines here, rolling to the seating area when company arrives and tucking back against the wall afterwards. We see many UK homes at Furniture in Fashion using a single versatile piece this way, earning its place across the whole day.
Set the bar up so refills are simple. A water jug, a small bin for grounds and a cloth kept close mean the routine never interrupts the evening.
Keeping the Two Rooms in Balance
When a coffee bar lives in a living or dining room, it shares the stage with furniture chosen for comfort and gathering. The skill lies in letting it belong without taking over. Keep its footprint in proportion to the seating around it, and avoid letting equipment creep across the whole top. A bar that reads as one tidy element within the room feels far more relaxed than one that announces itself as a separate utility zone. Think of it as a quiet corner that happens to make coffee, rather than a kitchen fragment that has wandered into the lounge.
Sound and movement matter too in a shared space. Position the bar so that grinding or frothing does not sit right beside where someone settles to read or watch a film. A little thought about placement keeps the room peaceful while still putting the ritual within easy reach of everyone who uses it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a coffee bar need plumbing? No. Most home setups rely on a water jug or a quick trip to the kitchen, so a socket nearby is the only real requirement.
What is the best piece for a living room coffee bar? A sideboard or a drinks cabinet with closed storage works well, since it hides clutter and looks like considered furniture among your seating.
Can the same cabinet serve coffee and drinks? Yes. Swapping mugs for glasses turns a coffee bar into a drinks station in moments, which makes a versatile piece a smart choice.
How do I stop it looking cluttered? Keep tools in a drawer, use a tray for daily items and limit open shelving to a few pieces you are happy to display.

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