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How To Build A Hanging Desk In 15 Minutes

My dorm-design philosophy is this: things that touch the floor are bad. Now, while that’s not to say you should attempt to create a Swiss Family Robinson-style treehouse in your room, it’s pretty easy to agree that anything that sits on the floor takes up valuable space that could be used for yoga, stationary cycling, or counting laundered money. Therefore, things like combination refrigerator-microwaves and stackable containers are a godsend to the college student who’s been forced to get in touch with his inner sardine.

However, there is one dorm staple that beats the pants off of all other items when it comes to space saving – the loft bed. Though it may make you more susceptible to the old alarm-clock-and-ceiling one-two punch, a loft bed frees up approximately 21 square feet of floor space in your room. Winner winner, chicken dinner.

If you’re just putting up a loft and shoving all your crap under it, though, you’re wasting more potential than Lance Armstrong riding a Wal-Mart special. Lofts give you a sturdy piece of furniture with plenty of wooden beams – it’d be silly not to hang stuff off of them! That’s precisely the idea I got when I came home this summer and needed to build a desk. Instead of buying PVC pipe to build a standing desk, I picked up some chains and built a hanging desk. Now, not only do I have a cool-looking desk, but I also have all the floor space I would have had with no desk at all.

“My dorm room already comes with a desk!” you might complain – and that’s true for me as well. However, for those of you who have the luxury of being able to store that cookie-cutter monstrosity, or for those who, like me, brought their loft home for the summer, this tutorial should be of much usefulness. Here’s how to build a jaw-droppingly simple hanging desk in less than 15 minutes and for around $45 (YMMV).

Grab Your Materials

First, go to the store. Home Depot, Lowes, whatever – you’re going to need some stuff. By the way, I’m not including the time it takes you to buy the materials in the build time – “How to build a hanging desk in 48 minutes, give or take 12 depending on the traffic” just doesn’t have the right spark for this post’s title. Anyway, you will need four items:

  • A piece of hardboard. Like, the high-density fiberboard stuff. Don’t use particle board; that’s asking for trouble. Dimensions should be approximately 4ft x 2ft x 1in (the thickness is key – needs to be strong enough for all your stuff plus the weight of your arms. Err on the side of overkill here.)
  • Four 4-foot long sections of chain. I used Tenso Chain (the kind where each link is a double loop) because it’s strong and really cheap. Whatever you get, make sure it’s rated to at least 150 pounds to be safe. Tenso is rated at 244.
  • Rope. The type or thickness doesn’t really matter – just get what’s cheap. This won’t be bearing any weight, so you could even use spare yarn from your mom’s knitting supplies (Bonus: use enough and she can’t make you another horrid sweater for Christmas)
  • S-hooks or spring links to hold the chain.
The actual "desk" - your board.
Chains, rope, and hooks.

Pay no attention to the fact that I’m using both S-hooks and spring links for mine – Home Depot simply didn’t have enough of either for me to use just one.

Build the Hanging Desk

Next, you need to drill a hole in each corner of the board for the chains to loop through. To do this, grab a power drill with the largest drill bit you can find and drill four holes in each corner as close to each other as you can. Then angle the drill bit to clear out the excess wood to make one big hole. The holes will end up looking pretty sketchy, but they work. If you happen to have a drill press lying around, this process might be even easier.

This is what your holes should look like.

Now that you have your sketchy-looking holes drilled, loop a chain though each hole and secure it with an S-hook or spring link. Put the chains through the board first before hanging them from the bed; it’s much easier this way.

Loop the chain though a whole and secure it. (Yeah, I took this after the desk was built. Deal with it.)

Lying on your floor should be what looks like a wood-colored Spongebob with chain limbs. Now your need to prepare your bed. Take off your mattress and whatever else is up there so it’s easier to hang the desk.

Remove your mattress to make the process easier.

Now start hanging the desk. The easiest way to do this is go diagonally: hang one end, then do the opposite end. This way, the desk will be suspended after hanging only two chains. Hook up the other two and your desk will be secure. The great thing about chains is that they have links – simply adjust which link each hook is attached to until the desk is level and at the correct height.

Chain linkage from the bed.

Now you have a hanging desk! It should look like this:

The (incomplete) hanging desk. You could use it like this, but you wouldn't want to.

Left like this, however, the desk would swing. This is a bad thing. To fix this, you’ll need to fasten the desk to the two bedposts it rests against. First press the desk up the the bedposts at the position you want; then, drill a hole in the desk right in front of each post.

Drill holes near the bedposts.

Now, use the rope to tie the desk to each post. This will prevent the desk from swinging.

Tie the desk to the bedposts to prevent swinging.

You’re done! If you have big monitors like I do, feel free to toss a monitor shelf up there. Enjoy your hanging desk!

The finished desk.

What other dorm-DIY projects have you come up with? Tell us about them in the comments!

UPDATE: If you’re skeptical about the desk’s strength, the proof is in the pudding đŸ˜‰

75 pounds - no problem.

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