Office Bookcase Shelves Library Light Hardwood Floors Design Photos and Ideas

Ben Koush’s studio office faces the street and features a sleek modern desk he designed, as well as built-in bookshelves filled with colorful books and art.
This detached home office unit by FORWARD Design | Architecture features a fire engine red exterior and ample storage within.
The library provides sleek, closed storage and open shelves that reach over 12 feet high. A Moroso/Diesel Cloudscape Chair sits beside the De La Espada Laurel Coffee Table, with a Flos String Light strung overhead. The painting is by Krzysztof Kokoryn.
On the other side of the open loft is a quiet yet spacious office with custom birch storage.
Home office with custom millwork
Home office with navy blue walls and drapery.
There's event seating for up to 1,000 people in the midst of the library, as well as partitions to separate the space.
The renovation of this one-time locomotive shed into a multipurpose library still kept its industrial aesthetic.
Inside, pinewood bookshelves surround a reading area without obstructing natural light.
Open, pinewood bookshelves divide the interiors, but don't block views.
Office
The master bedroom has enough space to accommodate a home office, library, and lounge.
A communal table sits in the lending library, which features over 2,000 female-written titles, all curated by the Strand Bookstore. A "Wing Women Reading List of 50 must-read titles," composed by The Lantern—a local non-profit bookstore run by Bryn Mawr grads—is also available for use.
Study overlooks side yard ascending hillside
A dramatic pink granite table provides a central meeting spot.
Secret doors in the bookcases conceal soundproof phone booths.
In renovating a historic brick home for family friends in Washington, D.C., architect Nader Tehrani of NADAAA used ordinary plywood to reconceive the central staircase. Lined with a series of striated, geometric panels, the resulting structure is lit by a polygonal skylight above. Tehrani also designed the Pentavola table—featuring five sides, one for each member of the family—which they use as a communal workspace on the second-floor landing.
View looking from office space toward guest suite
View looking from office space toward guest suite
View looking from office space toward guest suite
Home Office