A TV unit that combines open and closed storage offers the best of both approaches. Open shelving keeps everyday items within reach and gives you space to display a few favourite objects. Closed cabinets and drawers hide the clutter that gathers in any living room, from cables to controllers to the odd stack of paperwork. Together they create a piece that is practical and tidy at once.
For UK homes, where living rooms often double as workspaces and play areas, this flexibility is genuinely useful. You decide what to show and what to tuck away, and the room stays calm as a result.
Before choosing, take a moment to consider what you actually store around the television. Media devices, game consoles and remote controls suit closed compartments that keep cables out of sight. Books, plants and decorative pieces sit happily on open shelves. Knowing the balance you need helps you choose a layout that fits your life.
The full range of TV units includes many designs that blend both storage types, so it is worth comparing layouts. Some lean towards display, others towards concealment, and the right choice depends on how tidy you like the room to feel.
Open and closed storage changes how a unit reads visually. A piece with cabinets along the base and open shelving above feels grounded and balanced. One with alternating compartments creates a lighter, more rhythmic look. Think about the wall and the room when you decide, since proportion affects how settled the piece feels.
For larger walls, a wider design with generous storage suits the space. The entertainment units range offers more substantial pieces that combine plentiful closed storage with display areas, ideal for homes that want everything in one place.
Finish interacts with storage in a way that is easy to overlook. Glossy doors on closed cabinets reflect light and keep a busy unit feeling sleek, while open shelves in the same finish offer a crisp stage for display. A piece from the high gloss TV stands range can make a storage heavy design feel light and modern.
Timber finishes, on the other hand, bring warmth to open shelving and make displayed objects feel at home. The natural tone of wooden TV stands softens the structure of mixed storage and suits a relaxed room.
Open storage is only as tidy as you keep it, so a little discipline helps. Group items in small clusters, leave breathing space between them, and avoid filling every shelf. A mix of horizontal and vertical objects, such as stacked books beside an upright plant, creates a pleasing rhythm.
The closed sections do the heavy lifting of hiding clutter, which frees the open shelves to look curated rather than crammed. This balance is what makes mixed storage so satisfying to live with.
Many UK living rooms are asked to do more than one job. The same space might host film evenings, homework, hobbies and the occasional work call, and a mixed storage unit handles this gentle chaos well. Closed cabinets swallow the items that belong to one activity, so they can be cleared away when another begins, keeping the room flexible.
Drawers are particularly useful for this kind of living. They keep small, easily lost items grouped and accessible, from chargers to stationery, while presenting a clean front to the room. Choosing a unit with a drawer or two alongside its cabinets and shelves gives you a quiet, adaptable system that suits a busy household.
When a unit combines several storage types, a consistent finish helps it read as one considered piece rather than a collection of compartments. Matching the handles, or choosing a design with handleless doors, keeps the look clean. Let the displayed objects provide the variety, while the structure itself stays calm and uniform.
A TV unit with open and closed storage suits the way many UK households actually live. By working out your storage needs, choosing a proportion that fits the room, and pairing the right finish with a considered styling approach, you create a piece that keeps the living room tidy and characterful in equal measure. The result is a unit that earns its place every single day.
Why choose both open and closed storage? Open shelves keep favourite items on show while closed cabinets hide clutter, giving you a tidy yet personable living room.
What should go in the closed sections? Cables, devices, controllers and paperwork sit best behind doors, keeping the surface and shelves looking calm.
Does finish affect how storage looks? Yes. Gloss keeps a storage heavy unit feeling light, while timber adds warmth to open shelves and displayed objects.
How do I keep open shelves looking tidy? Group items loosely, leave space between them, and let the closed sections handle the clutter so shelves stay curated.
The hallway is the first room anyone sees, yet it is often the last to…
British light is famously changeable, and a finish that looks warm in afternoon daylight can…
Family life rarely stands still, and a living room that suited a couple soon adapts…
The living room is still the heart of most UK homes, and in 2026 the…
In a small UK home, every piece of furniture has to justify the space it…
Finishing a proper clear out leaves a home feeling lighter, but without the right storage…
This website uses cookies.