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DIY Project: Turning a Home Office on Its Side -- Tackling Cables

052108_sz_homo1.jpgIt’s been a month since I first started moving my home office from a vertical standpoint to a horizontal one. It’s taken me a bit more time than I thought, but I made some serious progress yesterday. Above is where I was at first thing in the morning. My main complaint was that all my wires and components were sitting on or below my teacart at left.052108_sz_homocords.jpgI can’t stand how many power cables, Ethernet wires, and USB cords are needed for Internet and phone at home – sheesh!

My solution: Installing (almost) everything beneath the last shelf on the teacart. After the jump, a breakdown of what I did…

So my first hiccup was that the shelf on my teacart is super thin -- like cardboard thin.052108_sz_homocart.jpgI decided to install a piece of wood (a leftover from Ikea’s Antonius shelf), on the underside of the teacart shelf so that I had more girth to screw all my components into.052108_sz_homowood.jpgI then secured my power strip, broadband router, VoIP router, and Lacie external hard drive to the wood plank using 2 3/16-inch L-shaped support hooks.052108_sz_homoclose.jpgFrom there I started plugging in all the cables into their respective ports and wrapping up excess cords with Velcro straps found at the Container store.052108_sz_homocordclose.jpgI then installed the hook side from a roll of adhesive Velcro onto the underside of the teacart in order to stick my excess cords to it. I also put some Velcro on my VoIP router, along with the router's large power box so I could stick the box onto the router.052108_sz_homocordone.jpgIt looks a bit insane from below, but when righted and wheeled into its spot (now on the right side of my desk) I think it looks pretty good.052108_sz_homocabledone.jpg You?

My next step is putting vintage curtains around the teacart to hide my all-in-one printer. More on that soon...

Comments (7)

wowowow! good job!!! :)

i bought the belkin concealed power strip. which i do love. however, i'm finding my problem with organizing the cables is that when i need to unplug ANYTHING, or, for that matter, plug IN anything, it is the most annoying process ever. it is SO not organized within the concealer! thankfully, it conceals well.

i am most proud of putting the wireless printer, cable modem, and netgear router all in the hall closet! it's really made me happy :)

posted by kdkaboom on 2008-05-21 20:00:00
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From the viewpoint of getting everything out of the way, it's great to attach things to the bottom or back of a desk or table, but if you have to tweak your connection or reset a device, it's a real pain to access them.

While I know it's not "pretty", I prefer to have devices where I can see what their lights are telling me rather than sticking them so far out of the way.

I made a custom stand to do this and you can't see the wires my way either.

http://tinyurl.com/55bh5d

However, I'm guessing this would be a pretty bad solution for minimalists.

posted by Orchid64 on 2008-05-22 07:13:00
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kdkaboom,
do you mind sending me pics of your solution? Interested in seeing what you did. You can catch me at sonia (at) apartmenttherapy (dot) com.

Orchid64, what does your wiring situation look like? I like how your routers fits so nicely underneath your monitor stand, but I'm curious what the cable sitch looks like.
-s

posted by lil' soso on 2008-05-22 16:37:02
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Surely! I'd be delighted to share! I'll try and get some good photos taken today or over the weekend. Cheers!

posted by kdkaboom on 2008-05-23 11:39:47
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On Oprah a few days ago, Nate Berkus (sp?) had a solution to this...

He cut a hole in the side of a nice box (no, he didn't stick his dick in the box :P). Then he stuck all the ugly wires in in and put the lid on - voila, all gone!

posted by jackie_22 on 2008-05-23 21:23:06
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Weeee! Dickinabox reference!

Jackie, that box trick - I've seen that around before on AT. The issue people had with it was all the heat building up inside from the power strip or something. I dunno, whatev. I just loved your SNL reference ;)

posted by kdkaboom on 2008-05-24 09:36:57
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lil' soso: The cables fall freely behind my desk (which has a metal grate back with quite tiny holes which can't be seen through) so they are out of sight.

The stand cost $4 (and zero skill) to make, btw.

posted by Orchid64 on 2008-05-25 03:56:27
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