The Nightstand With a Built-In Cat House: Smart Design for Pet-Friendly Bedrooms
A tabby cat sits curled in the open lower compartment of a wooden nightstand, looking entirely satisfied with the arrangement. This is a piece of furniture that solves two problems at once: it gives you a bedside surface with a small shelf and a display space on top, and it gives your cat their own clearly defined sleeping spot at floor level, tucked away from the bed but close enough to still feel like part of the room. The result is a bedroom that accommodates a pet without any of the visual chaos that usually comes with pet accessories.
Why standard pet beds fail in bedrooms
A conventional pet bed — round, plush, usually in a colour that matches nothing else in the room — sits on the floor and immediately draws attention to itself. It rarely fits the aesthetic. In a small bedroom it takes up floor space that could be clear. And most cats either love it or ignore it entirely. A built-in compartment like this one works because the cat's space is integrated into the furniture itself: it's always in the same place, it's contained, and it reads as part of the design rather than an addition to it.
The design: clean lines, warm oak
The nightstand here is made from light natural oak — warm grain, clean joints, no ornamentation. The top surface has a small raised back panel that creates a ledge for the plant, the clock and the small ceramic dish. The open compartment at the base is lined with a low-pile carpet offcut or removable cushion pad, giving the cat the soft surface they need without any loose bedding to wash. The whole piece is simple enough to fit into almost any bedroom aesthetic, particularly a Scandinavian or Japandi one.
What sits on top
The top surface styling here is a model of restraint: one small potted plant in a handmade ceramic pot (a monstera or pothos cutting), a small circular clock and a tiny round ceramic dish. That's all. Nothing that would look out of place on a bedside table; nothing that competes with the piece itself.
Sourcing or building one
Furniture like this is available from specialist pet-friendly design brands and some Scandinavian furniture makers, but it's also entirely achievable as a DIY project. A cube unit, some oak-veneer MDF, a few hours and a small piece of carpet tile are all you need. Build a box at the right height for your bedside table, add a lower compartment with a cushion, and finish with oil or wax. Your cat will have a space; your bedroom will look better.
Interior tips
- Line the compartment with a removable cushion pad rather than fixed padding — it needs to be washable. A simple foam pad cut to size and covered in a pillow case is ideal.
- Match the nightstand material to your bed frame: oak-on-oak creates coherence; mixing woods in a small bedroom looks accidental. If your bed frame is walnut, build or buy the cat stand in walnut.
- Keep the top surface to three objects maximum: in a small bedroom every surface is visible from the bed. Three items is enough; four starts to feel cluttered.
- A small trailing plant rather than a tall one: a low, trailing or spreading plant is less likely to be knocked off by a cat jumping up, and it fills the back ledge without blocking the sightline from the bed.
- Place it on the same side as your bedroom door: cats tend to enter and exit the room rather than staying all night. A bed beside the door means less bed-crossing disruption at 3 am.
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