bunk beds for sale in new york

bunk beds for sale in new york

bunk beds for sale in bath

Bunk Beds For Sale In New York

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Spring Special - Now thru Sunday Get an Instant Rebate of $100 on Select Bunks, Lofts and Captain's Beds PLUS $100 to $600 Bedroom Package Savings AND: ✔ $100 Off any Mattress with Purchase of a Bed* ✔ 12-Month Interest Free Financing** ✔ Free In-Home Service Guarantee*** Savings throughout the store on Showroom Samples, Clearance Merchandise and One-of-a-Kind Items.**On purchases with The Bedroom Source credit card. Subject to credit approval. Interest will be charged to your account from the purchase date if promotional purchase is not paid in full within 12 months. Minimum monthly payments required. Minimum purchase for 12 Month Financing is $999. 6 month financing also available for purchases under $999. ***See salesperson for length of guarantee for your collection. Click here for more details regarding special financing options. Bunks & Lofts Categories Be sure to check out our best selling Maxtrix furniture system. Watch the Maxtrix video for a fast overview and visit our furniture showroom to experience the qualities of Maxtrix firsthand.




Select from the bunk & loft categories below or browse through the thumbnail pictures below. If you don't find the perfect bunk bed or loft, please don't hesitate to call one of our friendly staff at (516) 248-0600 for helpful assistance. We deliver to Long Island, the 5 Boroughs of New York City, Rockland, southern Connecticut, and northern New Jersey. Full over FullFuton StyleLadder StyleLofts with DesksLow Bunk BedsLow Loft BedsStaircase StyleSure, most parents would probably prefer that each of their kids has his or her own bedroom, but unfortunately, in NYC that's often not possible. That's where bunk beds come in. To find out what works best for NYC families, we asked New Yorkers to recommend their favorite brands and styles which help fit more kids into one room. The first thing you may need to decide is whether you want stairs or a ladder and whether you want a bed that can be broken down into two twin beds eventually if you find yourself having more space.




Of course, storage is often key, too, so we've taken that into account. Casa Kids builds bunks and loft beds in their Red Hook warehouse, so you can feel proud of your Made in the U.S.A.—Made in NYC even!—purchase. They sell already finished products, or have designers who can create a customized option for you. Prices of non-custom beds range from $1,800 to $4,800. We're partial to the look of the Marino bunk bed with stairs (it also comes with a ladder if you prefer) . If you're looking for something particularly light—and easier to move—the company has recently streamlined their 2016 Cabin Bunk Bed. The bunk beds are convertible to two twin-sized beds or a twin-sized bed and a a daybed. One NYC mom told us she grew up with this bunk bed, converted into into a single bed and a day bed, and it's still going strong 30 years later. The Classic Solid End Convertible  Bunk Bed from This End Up may not be as modern as some of the other choices (and may remind you of summer camp), but it's durable, which counts for a lot given how kids' beds often double as homework spots and trampolines for young, space-starved New Yorkers.




And it starts at $691. If one of your kids is afraid of being really high up on the top level, this mid-high bunk bed might help. Plus, it's got tons of storage. Currently, it's priced at $2,115, plus shipping and handling at Totally Kids. A full-sized version is available for $2,440. Oeuf always nails the modern look when it comes to kids furniture and their Perch Bunk Bed is no exception.  It easily separates into a loft bed with a standalone twin underneath should you prefer. Extra points for the small footprint (42 inches by 78 inches) and fairly decent—given the look and quality—price ($1,590). Restoration Hardware has a lot of bunk and loft bed options—ranging from $1,499 to $5,299—but when we spotted the Chesterfield Upholstered Bunk Bed (shown above) in a friend's apartment the other day, we were immediately wowed by how pretty and cozy it looks in person. It's even available in velvet and leather. Prices range from $2,339 to $5,299. Plus, "customer service is amazing," says one bunk owner.




One mother of two in a two-bedroom apartment told us she loves the Gothic Cabinet Twin Bunk Bed for a couple of reasons: First, it offers lots of storage (six drawers total) and the top bunk is enclosed, making it feel more secure. It's also sturdy, she says, and happens to be pretty reasonably priced, starting at $749. It's available finished or unfinished (as is always the case with Gothic's wood furniture), with 18 different color options. Part of Berg Furniture's Space Saver Collection, this twin-over-twin bed has a total of 16 drawers, so you're basically getting two beds and two dressers in one.   The twin platform bed shown here also has an additinoal under-bed storage drawer and a headboard bookcase with a fluorescent light fixture built in. Take a close look,  and you'll see that there's storage just about everywhere. It costs around $2,300, but check a local store for exact prices. Maxtrix has everything from play beds with slides and curtains built in (maybe better for weekend homes?), to storage and study beds to corner bunks to quadruple bunk beds (!). 




It's a furniture system you can change up as your children grow and customize it to their needs. The one above has a twin on top and full on the bottom and is $1,299. Expert room-sharing tips for New York City kids One family's ingenious solution to the sibling room-sharing dilemma How one Manhattan couple made way for baby number two in their two-bedroom -- for less than $1,000?The punishing rents of New York City breed unusual compromises. Sophomore year of college, I snagged a one-bedroom at the top of a seventh-floor walk-up in Lower Manhattan. The week I moved in, a neighbor pulled me aside and offered wisdom on the climb: “Your legs will get used to it,” she said, “but your heart never will.” How literally she meant this, I was never sure.The apartment was tiny — I had to shuffle sideways like a crab to get into my bathroom — and I was intent on justifying the unreasonable rent. So the day before I moved in, I ordered a bunk bed on Amazon. I figured that with an extra berth, I could effectively double the apartment’s holding capacity, allow out-of-towners to avoid hotels and offer refuge for friends, whether locked out of their own homes or weary of the slog back to Brooklyn.The bed arrived as a sprawl of metal poles, each embalmed in white lacquer.




I had picked a model with a full-size bed on bottom and a twin on top. While a traditional twin-on-twin evokes the accommodations of childhood and camp, prison and the military — a sign, somehow, of both playfulness and austerity — the twin-over-full variety signals something entirely different, and possibly even transgressive. Instead of two sleepers, the bed seemed to beckon heterodox groupings of three or four.Most evenings, the bunk bed offered itself up as a choice. Did I want to transcend worldly concerns, swaddled and suspended in a criblike twin bed that enveloped my lanky build? Or did I prefer to brave the open expanse of the full bed like a taxpaying adult? The decision involved a touch of foresight. The bed was wedged against three walls, and waking up on the twin meant either shimmying down the ladder (and having my ribs played like a xylophone by the rungs) or taking a morning death-leap from the top, more invigorating than a cup of coffee. During the trial run, close friends took the bottom, and I, rather religiously, took the top.




I was convinced I would be horribly maimed should the contraption collapse — “Please! You take the bottom,” I insisted, shrouding my dread in panicked largess. But once the lights were off, youthful exchanges about life, love and the cosmos raged. We were recumbent along an intimate vertical axis, and our words, unmarred by dubious glances, spilled into the air. All night, the whoosh of cars outside echoed through the room like waves against a hull; until sleep finally took us, we were out at sea together, stowed away safely. The bed swiftly earned its claim to being one of my most prized possessions. Then, my parents came to visit.One evening, I left the apartment to pick up milk for the morning’s cereal. When I returned, they were absent from the living room, and the bedroom door was closed. I opened the door, and I regret it, as those who open doors so often do. My parents, stumbling through a defense, confessed that the bunk bed had sparked dormant passions — the bed’s latticework of metal poles both the kindling and the match that ignited their love aflame.




Freud’s “primal scene” is supposedly a trauma specific to childhood, but I am now no longer sure. In the years to follow, the bed exerted something like a centripetal force on the space. Nearly all memorable activity in the apartment spiraled around it. Regardless of how close any two (or more) people are beforehand, on bunks they fall asleep together, they wake up together, they hear each other sleeping (snoring, babbling, rolling around). Each person is made to be vulnerable before the other, and in doing so bonds in an unusual and meaningful way. The twin-over-full arrangement did not militate against the orgiastic, as my parents had proved, but much more often, it fostered friendship. In the summer, small, boozy gatherings in the apartment migrated to the air-conditioned bedroom. As many as six of us would distribute ourselves across the beds, and occasionally someone would be dispatched to the bottom bunk if the metal moaned too much under our weight. Treasured memories of childhood mischief and sleepaway camp inevitably surfaced, cementing new friendships and shedding light on old ones.

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