Yanko Design

The Corner 99.5% of Wardrobes Ignore Finally Has a Rack for It

The wardrobe is one of those household objects that seems like it has plenty of room until it doesn’t. Most people eventually find themselves pushing hangers aside to make space, folding things into corners, and stacking items on whatever flat surface presents itself. Organization accessories exist in abundance, but the majority address the visible problem rather than the structural one.

A user survey of more than 50 real wardrobes found that 99.5% of the top corners went entirely unused, prime vertical real estate that no hanging rod reaches, and no standard shelf fits. That specific insight became the starting point for CONCEPT II, a wardrobe rack designed not for the existing infrastructure of the wardrobe but for the part most people have simply given up on.

Designer: Arnav Ashwin

A single vertical post in a dark finish anchors the rack, with a series of wooden shelf slabs attached at staggered heights and alternating sides. The shelves vary in size, with the largest at the bottom and progressively smaller ones rising toward the top, giving the whole structure a stepped, almost branching silhouette that takes up almost no floor footprint while climbing the otherwise empty height of the corner.

Each shelf slides into a slot in the post rather than being fixed, so the order can be changed based on what needs to go where. Taller items that wouldn’t fit between closely spaced shelves can be shifted to a wider gap. A triangular corner shelf piece also fits the post, filling the awkward dead angle that most corner storage solutions simply leave behind.

All the components come apart completely, which has a practical consequence beyond just being convenient to assemble. When it needs to move or doesn’t fit through a doorway assembled, everything lays flat for packaging. The slot-and-groove connection that makes the shelves adjustable is the same mechanism that allows the whole thing to disassemble without tools, keeping the design logic consistent from first assembly to eventual relocation.

Someone who keeps cosmetics, accessories, or chargers on the wardrobe floor because there’s nowhere else for them now has a structured option that doesn’t involve buying new furniture or installing shelves in the wall. The rack sits in the corner, takes up the space that was already empty, and gives each category of item its own level without competing with the hanging clothes.

The rack doesn’t have to stay inside the wardrobe either. The warm wood tones and staggered profile work just as well against a living room wall or next to a television, where the shelves hold plants, small sculptures, or anything decorative. It’s the kind of piece that looks intentional rather than utilitarian in an open setting, which isn’t something most storage accessories can convincingly claim.

The material choice of solid wood paired with a dark post finish gives the rack a considered appearance that doesn’t telegraph “storage problem.” The user research behind it, drawn from a survey of more than 50 real wardrobes, makes the solution feel less like a product invention and more like an obvious fix that took a careful look at the actual problem to arrive at.

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