Narrow living rooms are common in British homes, particularly in terraces, flats, and older townhouses. The width may be tight, but the length is often generous, which gives you more options than it first seems. At Furniture in Fashion, we regularly help shoppers with this exact shape of room, and a calm, considered approach usually produces the best result.
Begin by measuring the room carefully. Note the width at several points, because many older homes have walls that are not quite parallel. A narrow room that tapers by even five centimetres at one end can change what will actually fit. Record where the doorways sit and how wide they open, because these will affect delivery as well as layout.
In narrow rooms, a longer sofa with a shallower depth almost always works better than a deep two seater. A three seater with a depth of about eighty five centimetres, placed along the longest wall, keeps the centre of the room walkable. Our sofa beds and everyday sofas are listed with full dimensions so you can check both length and depth before ordering.
A full corner sofa can work in a narrow room if you choose carefully. Look for a short chaise return, ideally no more than 140 cm, so the sofa does not block walking routes. Place it against the longer wall rather than the shorter one, with the chaise pointing away from the door. The corner then creates a natural seating pocket without consuming the entire floor.
Narrow rooms suffer when furniture feels chunky. Slim arms save precious width, and a shallower back depth leaves more of the room open. If you love a deeper sofa, choose one with a slightly higher back so the overall proportion stays balanced.
Every narrow room has a traffic route, usually from the door to a window or to the television. Keep that route at least seventy centimetres wide. Place side tables and lamps against the wall rather than in the middle of the room. A small tub chair at the far end of a narrow room often works better than a matching sofa, because it provides extra seating without eating into the corridor of movement.
Narrow rooms tend to be longer than they are wide. Use the length by creating two zones, one for seating around the sofa and one for a small desk, a reading chair or a console. This uses space that would otherwise feel dead and prevents the room from reading purely as a corridor.
Narrow rooms can feel longer and thinner if colour choices are not considered. Painting the shorter walls in a slightly darker tone than the longer walls helps balance the proportions. Sofas in mid tones, such as clay, olive, or warm grey, tend to anchor narrow rooms without closing them in. Very dark sofas work only when the rest of the room stays light.
Running flooring lengthwise in a narrow room can make it feel even narrower. A rug placed across the room rather than along it can break up this effect. The sofa should sit on the rug at its front legs, linking the sofa to the rest of the layout without forcing the whole room to follow a single direction.
Our sofa collection includes designs well suited to narrow British rooms, with slim arms, compact depths and a range of lengths. We list every measurement clearly, so you can plan with confidence before placing your order.
Not usually. A three seater along the longest wall often works better than a deeper two seater in a narrow space.
Only if the chaise return is short, ideally around 140 cm or less. Otherwise it can block walking routes.
Mid tones anchor the space without making it feel closed in. Very dark sofas need balancing light walls around them.
At least seventy centimetres keeps the room comfortable for daily use and easier to clean.
Yes. Laying a rug across the width rather than along the length can help balance the proportions visually.
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