DON'T MISS A HACK. CONNECT WITH ME.

Friday, December 28, 2012

Engan Room


Materials: Engan bed frame, 1 1/4" angle iron, 1/4" 20 bolts, nuts, and washers, chop saw, drill press, TIG welder, hand saw.

Description: This brings new meaning to the term bedroom. A rather small room for a queen sized bed at 92"x81", 80" if you include base boards. The product dimensions are 61 3/4"x81 1/2". The idea was to take off one of the either headers or footers to alleviate the length needed to fit inside the space. It became a bit more than that later on in the process.



It begins with dismantling the footer from the two side lengths. Including the midbeam bracket. This will leave the bed in disuse until you can cut and weld you angle iron. You can place the slates and the midbeam aside.
You will now need access to a metal shop to cut, weld and fabricate the 'sub-frame' as I'll call it.
Angle iron lengths as follows.
3 - 8"
1 - 61 7/8"
2 - 5"
2 - approx. 4"

Cut the 2 5" at a 45 degree angle at one end. Make sure you cut the correct side.

One for the right and one for the left.

Cut the 61 7/8" at a 45 degree angle at each end.

Join the 5" lengths to the 61 7/8" length together via a welder.

Join the 3 8" lengths to the welded long section of the subframe. Space the 3 out across the length. Two for each end, and the last for the middle. These will hold the bed up just fine.

Drill a 1/4" hole through the two lengths of the 4" iron. These holes will be placed 1/2 inch from the top and from the left or right respectively.

Weld these length to the subframe. Place the foot of the 'L' that makes up the shape of angle iron toward you. This is where we are going to attach the midbeam bracket soon.

I had to manually saw off an inch of the Engan frame to accommodate the room's dimensions. You may not have to.

Place the midbeam bracket onto the subframe. Fasten with 1/4' 20 bolts, nuts, and washers.

Now the subframe will act just like the original.

Re-assemble the Engan frame, skipping a few of the footer instructions because we dont have to use that hardware anymore.

~ Colin Butgereit, Brooklyn, NYC, USA

5 comments:

  1. An important safety note: It's essential to leave an air space around your baseboard radiator!

    Over time, the heat will dry out that cotton curtain and make it VERY combustible. It's quite possible that the heat trapped by the bed might even ignite the curtain.

    Please move the bed away from the baseboard radiator and trim the curtain so it is at least 3" (7-8 cm) above the baseboard.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Good catch! That does look scary. That must be challenging having a bedroom the size of a closet, but you were up to the challenge. Just give that radiator some air and it'll be awesome.

      Delete
  2. I used to have a room that size. I would of been interested to see what they did with the rest of the rooms contents. Cause getting the bed in wasn't the hard part. The hard part was what do I do with my clothes. (Ended up making roller shelves that fit under the bed.)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wouldn't it have been easier to just get a full size bed?

    ReplyDelete
  4. or wouldn't have been easier to turn the bed, if you are only going to have 30"x80" floor space, wouldn't 20"x80" + 10"x80" work too?

    ReplyDelete

Everyone is free to comment but IKEAHackers.net reserves the right to remove comments that do not contribute constructively to the discussion, contain profanity, personal attacks or seek to promote a personal or unrelated business. SPAM will be deleted.

If you have a Blogger profile, you can click on the SUBSCRIBE BY EMAIL link that will show up below and receive all follow up comments on the hack via email.

Don't have a Blogger profile? Create one for free here so you won't have to be be listed as "anonymous".