Cape Cod House Storage Space | Home Projects
When the Hallee family moved into their 1950s Cape Cod house in Portland, Maine, the lack of storage space was an issue that needed to be addressed. Ken; his wife, Lisa; and their young daughter, Emma, live in a cozy two-bedroom home where “storage has always been an issue,” Ken says, and no more so […]

Coffee By Design | Portland, Maine
Photo Credit : Katherine Keenan
Photo Credit : Dorrance, Scott
But then, two years ago, during a gutting of the upstairs bathroom, the Hallees noticed a peculiar thing: The elimination of that room’s knee walls revealed a potential storage area that ran 4 feet deep and, at its tallest point, 4 feet high. Suddenly those slanted walls weren’t such a liability. “We figured we could do the same thing in the bedroom,” recalls Ken. “So when the bathroom was done, we said, ‘Let’s keep going.’ “
PROCESS
After debating whether to create just two large storage spaces, the Hallee family opted for a design that featured sectioned-off areas, with a few open-faced spots for book shelving and a television. Ken knocked out the room’s two 12-foot-long knee walls, reframed both eaves, and then Sheetrocked the studded walls. Within each space, he restored the home’s original wide-pine-board floors and then matched their color to the walls’ eggshell white.
The Hallees aren’t big fans of ornate home design–“we’re less-is-more kind of people,” says Ken–and the look of these storage spaces reflects that. The trim is simple 3-inch-wide pine; the top runner is a 12-foot board with standard three-quarter-inch molding.
Perhaps the greatest design flourishes in the new space are the five double-hinged doors, which Ken fashioned out of ready-made sheets of wainscoting, trimmed with 3-inch pine, for a “cottage-style” look.
Ken also installed a very practical extra electrical outlet behind the television space, eliminating the look of unsightly wires. The shelving itself comprises five 8-inch-wide boards, which can be removed easily to create an all-purpose cubbyhole.
Most important of all, Ken now has a home for his shirts, shoes, and sweaters, neatly organized on removable wire racks.
WHAT DO YOU LIKE MOST?
That’s simple: Ken doesn’t have to leave his bedroom to retrieve his clothes. “Before this, we had just two little closets for three people,” Ken says. “It wasn’t working.”
Cost: $650
(including lumber, drywall, wainscoting panels, and storage racks)