Living rooms have grown more flexible in recent years. They host film nights, dinners with friends and quiet evenings at the end of the week, often in the same space. A small home bar built into the layout adds a sense of occasion to all of it. The trick is to integrate it gently, so the bar feels part of the room rather than an addition stuck to one wall.
Here are six approaches to a living room bar that suit the realities of UK homes, from period flats to modern semis.
A standalone drinks cabinet is the most considered route. Closed when not in use, it tucks bottles and glassware out of sight, and opens up into a generous serving surface when guests arrive. Mirrored interiors and integrated lighting bring a sense of theatre to the evening. Browse a range of drinks cabinets in finishes from rich walnut to high gloss black to find one that suits your scheme.
If a full cabinet feels too much, a console table behind the sofa or against a free wall offers a slim solution. Layer a tray with decanters, a couple of mixing tools and a small lamp. The console keeps its day job as a hallway or living room piece, but transforms quickly into a serving spot in the evenings. A reading lamp at one end helps lift the surface in the darker months.
For homes that genuinely use the bar function, a compact bar table with two stools makes a charming corner. Slot it near a window or beside a bookcase, and you have a self contained zone for nightcaps and conversation. This approach works particularly well in larger reception rooms or open plan living dining spaces.
Many sideboards offer a clever middle ground. The drawers can hold linen, glassware and cocktail kit, while the top serves as a counter for pouring. The closed look means the room stays calm and uncluttered when you are not entertaining. Pair the sideboard with framed art above and a pair of table lamps for symmetry.
Serving trolleys have made a quiet comeback. Their charm lies in their mobility. Park it next to an armchair for a relaxed evening, wheel it into the dining area for dinner parties, or move it onto the patio in summer. Brass and mirrored trolleys feel a touch glamorous, while wooden frames suit traditional rooms with more weight to them.
In smaller flats and city homes, floor space is precious. A floating shelf or wall mounted bar unit lifts the bar off the ground entirely. Add a pair of bar chairs if the wall is positioned at counter height, or treat it as a display shelf for spirits and glassware. Backlighting from a slim LED strip brings the contents to life after dark.
The most considered living room bars feel related to the rest of the furniture. Pull the timber tone of your living room furniture through into the cabinet or trolley, or repeat a metallic accent from your lamps and frames. Keep the bar area lit gently in the evening with a small lamp rather than overhead light, and choose a rug underfoot that can take the occasional spill.
If your home has children or pets, a cabinet with doors and a discreet lock is a sensible choice for spirits. If the bar will see regular use, choose a surface that is sealed, or sit a tray on top to catch drips. And think about distance to the kitchen. A bar that lives twenty paces from the ice maker can quickly lose its appeal.
At Furniture in Fashion, we see the home bar as a small piece of considered theatre. Done with restraint, it makes the living room feel like the kind of place people want to settle into for the evening.
Not at all. Most home bars work beautifully as part of the living room, integrated into a sideboard, console or cabinet. A separate snug or bar room is a luxury, not a requirement.
Keep daily spirits, a few favourite glasses, a small ice bucket and a couple of mixing tools to hand. Anything you reach for less than monthly can live in the kitchen, freeing the bar for the pieces you actually use.
A drinks cabinet around 90 to 120 centimetres wide is usually enough for a household. Trolleys are smaller still, often under 80 centimetres, which makes them suitable for flats and compact rooms.
Limit what sits out on display. A small group of bottles, two or three glasses and one decorative piece will look considered. The rest should live behind doors or below the surface.
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