Setting up a small office in your small home means finding new uses for closets  and other tucked-away spaces. 
Yes, you can! Squeeze a small office into your small  home, that is. But that doesn’t mean you have to take over one of the kids’  bedrooms—just look for under-utilized space.
After that, it’s decision time: How much to spend, how big to make the  office, and how you’ll use it.
Here are five solutions to consider:
1. Kitchen helper. From a $400 store-bought  island for bill-paying to a breakfast bench nook with file drawers built in  under the seats (cost: $5,000 to $15,000), your kitchen is a treasure trove of  small office possibilities. Even a slide-out cutting board (about $500 in a  cabinet package) can serve as a nifty desktop.
2. Closet  conversion. Get rid of unused stuff or consolidate it in another area,  and a 3- to 8-foot-wide closet accommodates a built-in desk, shelves, and  lighting. Make a nearby chair do double duty for your desk.
With doors  and wiring for lighting and a phone, and possible added drywall, your new small  office would cost $2,000 to $4,000. Keep in mind that the more floors and walls  that wiring has to travel through, the costlier it gets.
3. Porch  possibilities. Convert that long, narrow space on the side of your  small home that gets only seasonal use to a year-round  office for about $15 per square foot. Use plug-in space heaters and fans for  your HVAC system.
Use inexpensive,  freestanding shelves to provide storage space. Cost: About $70 for a  30-by-80-inch bookshelf.
4. Those out-of-the-way spaces.  Alcoves, lofts, stair landings, basement and garage corners, and bedroom nooks  qualify as potential office space. Use freestanding shelving units and  bookcases. Plants or privacy screens can “wall” the area without making it feel  smaller.
You can build a bench for visitors with storage space inside for  about $130. Want a craftsman to build it for you? Add another $300 to  $400.
5. Under-used dining rooms. Formal dining rooms  can be overrated. If yours isn’t being used regularly, convert it to a small  office. You’ll be close to your main entry, making it easy to receive clients  and business associates. If a nearby kitchen or other busy household area is a  noisy distraction, install French or sliding doors as acoustic  barriers.
Terry Sheridan is an award-winning writer who has covered real  estate and home ownership issues for more than 20 years. She’s owned homes  ranging from 1,500 square feet to 3,000 square feet.
Read more: http://www.houselogic.com/articles/fit-small-office-your-small-home/#ixzz1VlogoQCG
 
 
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