Space & Layout Series
Living Room Cable Management Ideas for Messy TV Areas
The modern multi-generational living room means a dense tangle of HDMI cables, power strips, and routers. It looks chaotic and causes trip hazards. Here is the elegant fix.
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Quick Answer
Who this page is for: Homeowners planning a built-in TV console and wanting clean cable routing.
This guide covers cable channel design, power outlet placement, and ventilation for electronics behind closed panels.
Material Standard
Caramella uses ENF-grade (Zero-HCHO) plywood core as our minimum build standard for all RPN and STKRJ projects in Brunei.
The Tech Collision Point
In Bruneian homes, the living room serves as a high-traffic collision point. Grandparents need comfortable viewing angles, kids need open floor space, and teenagers require access to complex gaming consoles and high-speed Wi-Fi routers. This density of activity results in an unsightly "spaghetti monster" of wires hanging from the TV down to an overloaded power strip gathering dust on the floor.
Retrofitted Solutions (DIY Phase)
If you're stuck with a standard, open-backed TV bench, you can temporarily mitigate the chaos:
- Heavy-Duty Mounting: Stop letting the heavy 6-gang surge protector drag on the floor. Use heavy-duty double-sided foam tape to stick it firmly to the underside or back panel of your TV stand.
- Hook-and-Loop Bundling: Ditch plastic zip ties, which are annoying when you need to swap a cable. Buy rolls of Velcro-style hook-and-loop strips to bundle HDMI and power cables into a single, neat trunk.
- The Rattan Router Trick: Bulky modern Wi-Fi routers ruin living room aesthetics. Hide them inside a hollow, decorative rattan or woven basket. The gaps allow airflow (preventing the router from overheating) and ensure complete Wi-Fi signal transmission, while perfectly hiding the ugly black box.
The Permanent Fix: Floating Architectural Consoles
Retrofitted cable management is always a frustrating compromise. It looks slightly better, but the dust accumulation is still impossible to clean.
To achieve the "quiet luxury" aesthetic seen in high-end design magazines, the infrastructure must be designed entirely around the technology. When Caramella designs a custom wall-mounted, floating TV console, we eliminate the wire problem at its source. Our units feature internally routed cable channels embedded directly into the feature wall or false backings.
Furthermore, we engineer hidden, structurally ventilated media compartments to house Xboxes, Playstations, and amplifiers, ensuring they don't overheat while remaining entirely out of sight. Finally, by floating the unit off the ground without legs, robotic vacuum cleaners have unhindered access to clean the floor beneath effortlessly.
Technical Specs That Matter
For Brunei homes, good cable management is mostly planning. We map every device before fabrication so cable routes, power points, and ventilation are built in from day one. For custom units, CNC panel cutting and hardware access planning prevent rework once TVs, routers, and consoles are installed in humid living spaces.
- Power planning: Place outlets behind the TV at about 1100–1200mm and service outlets inside lower compartments at about 250–300mm to avoid visible extension cords.
- Conduit sizing: Use separate channels for power and data. A 50mm conduit is practical when you need HDMI, LAN, and spare pull-lines for future upgrades.
- Ventilation: Keep intake and exhaust slots on opposite sides of enclosed media bays so heat from routers, consoles, and amplifiers can escape naturally.
- Access panels: Add removable rear service panels for faster troubleshooting instead of dismantling the entire console.