Alcoves are one of the great gifts of British architecture. Where modern new builds tend to have flat, uninterrupted walls, period homes and many semis have recesses either side of chimney breasts, in landings and tucked behind doorways. These small pockets of space are often filled with bookshelves or left bare. They can also make beautifully compact home bars.
Below is a calm, considered guide to styling a bar area within an alcove, written with real UK rooms in mind.
Before any furniture decisions are made, take a careful look at the alcove you have in mind. Measure the height, width and depth. Note the position of skirting, picture rails and any existing electrical sockets. Check whether the wall is plastered evenly. Older homes often have slightly uneven walls, which is not a problem, but it is useful to know before you order shelves or a cabinet.
Also consider light. Alcoves are usually a little darker than the rest of a room because they sit back from the main light source. This affects every styling choice that follows.
A bar alcove benefits from a backdrop that contrasts gently with the surrounding wall. Painting the inside of the alcove a deep, moody shade such as ink blue, forest green or warm clay creates instant depth. Patterned wallpaper inside the recess can also work, although it asks for a quieter scheme outside the alcove.
If your room is already painted in a darker tone, do the reverse. A softer cream or pale mushroom inside the alcove makes the bottles and glassware stand out cleanly.
Most successful bar alcoves use a combination of open shelving and a small closed cabinet below. Shelves keep your favourite bottles and glassware on show. The cabinet below hides everyday clutter such as openers, cloths, mixers and refills.
If you would rather not fit shelves into the wall, freestanding solutions look just as polished. A slim display cabinet can slot neatly into a wider alcove, while a tall narrow piece from our shelving units and storage collection works well in a shallower recess.
This is the step that separates a beautifully styled alcove bar from one that feels chaotic. Edit the bottles you put on display. Group them by colour or height. Hide branded plastic bottles inside the cabinet. Repeat shapes for calm rhythm, such as three matching decanters with a single tall amber bottle at one end.
Glassware brings its own charm. Two or three styles, repeated, look far better than ten styles, one each. A small set of coupes, a row of highballs and a single decanter is plenty for most homes.
Lighting is what turns a bar alcove from functional storage into a quietly luxurious moment. There are three useful options.
Strip lighting under each shelf casts a soft glow over the bottles and creates a gentle reflection on glassware. It is hidden during the day, so the look stays clean.
A small wall light fixed inside the alcove draws attention to the space at night. Browse our wall lights collection for slim, low profile shapes that fit shallow recesses.
A small lamp on the cabinet top, if there is room, adds warmth and makes the bar feel inviting rather than purely practical.
A bar without a working surface is just a display. If your alcove is deep enough, leave a clear strip across one shelf or the top of the cabinet to act as your serving area. Place a small wooden board there permanently, so you can mix a drink without searching for somewhere to set the bottle down.
If the alcove is shallow, consider a small mobile piece that lives nearby. A neat trolley from our drinks cabinets and serving trolleys can pull up to the alcove when needed and slide back to its home spot afterwards.
The most loved bar alcoves feel personal. A framed print of a favourite pub. A small ornament picked up on a trip. A book of cocktail recipes leant against the side. These touches keep the look human and stop it from feeling like a showroom shelf.
Resist the urge to fill every inch. Some negative space gives the eye room to rest and makes the bottles you do show feel more considered.
Step back and look at how the alcove sits within the room. If it is in a living room, pull through a colour from the bar into a cushion or a throw. If it is in a dining room, echo the metal finish of any fittings in your light pendant or chair legs. These quiet connections make the alcove feel part of the room rather than a separate decorative project.
Bar alcoves do collect dust and the occasional sticky ring. Choose surfaces that wipe clean easily. Sealed wood, painted MDF or stone topped cabinets all clean quickly. Use a soft cloth on glassware once a week to keep it gleaming, since glass that sits unused for long stretches loses its sparkle.
If you are not certain where to start, browse through our wider home pieces at Furniture in Fashion. Looking at full rooms often helps lock in the mood you want before you commit to specific shelves or cabinets, and many of our modern pieces ship with free UK delivery.
Around 25 to 30 centimetres is enough for shelving and most slim cabinets. Deeper alcoves give more room for a working surface.
Deeper shades such as ink blue, forest green or warm terracotta tend to work well, since they make bottles and glassware stand forward.
Yes, even a single small light makes a noticeable difference. Strip lighting under shelves is the most flattering option.
Absolutely. A shallow alcove of around 20 centimetres can still hold floating shelves and a slim wall light, which is enough for a quiet, considered bar moment.
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