
Here is a question that arrives in our showroom almost every weekend: a couple, usually in their late 20s or early 30s, renting or recently purchasing a two or three-bedroom apartment in JVC, Business Bay, or Dubai Marina, stands in front of two different furniture categories and asks the same thing. Do we need a TV unit or a sideboard? And if we buy one, do we still need the other? The honest answer, which our team gives every time, is that in a UAE open-plan apartment in 2026, the question itself is slightly out of date. The best-furnished UAE homes are no longer choosing between these two pieces. They are choosing a single piece that does both jobs simultaneously and doing it with considerably more style and function than either category delivers alone.
This question matters more in the UAE than anywhere else in the world for a specific reason: the open-plan apartment is the dominant residential format across Dubai, Sharjah, and Abu Dhabi. Whether you are in a 75-square-metre one-bedroom in International City or a 160-square-metre three-bedroom in Dubai Hills, the living and dining areas almost certainly share a single room, often without a physical dividing wall between them. That means every piece of furniture you choose must perform in two contexts simultaneously: as a dining-adjacent storage unit when you are eating, and as a living-room-anchoring entertainment piece when you are relaxing. A standard TV unit does only the second job. A standard dining buffet does only the first. A well-chosen sideboard in 2026 does both.
Karnak Home has been delivering furniture to UAE families since 1988. We have watched the UAE open-plan apartment evolve through at least four distinct interior design eras, and we have clear data on what works and what forces buyers to make a second purchase six months later to fix a gap they did not anticipate. In this guide, we lay out exactly how to approach the buffet-versus-TV-unit question for your specific UAE home type, budget, and family situation, with dimensions, AED figures, and concrete product direction throughout.
Understanding the UAE Open-Plan Challenge
Before resolving the buffet-versus-TV-unit question, it is worth understanding why it exists so persistently in the UAE market. The answer comes down to how UAE apartments are built and how UAE families actually live inside them.
The Geometry of UAE Open-Plan Living
The standard two-bedroom apartment in Dubai, the most common configuration across JVC, Al Barsha, Jumeirah Village Triangle, and Business Bay, places the living and dining areas in a single continuous space typically between 30 and 45 square metres. The kitchen is usually separated by a partial island or a short breakfast bar, but the visual and functional boundary between living and dining is almost always implied rather than structural.
This geometry creates a specific problem: the dining wall (where a buffet would naturally sit) and the living wall (where a TV unit belongs) are often the same wall, or at best, adjacent walls at 90 degrees from each other. Buyers who furnish these zones independently end up with two large pieces of furniture competing for wall space in a room that was never designed to accommodate both.
The 2026 answer is clear: use one piece, placed on the primary wall, that addresses both zones. A 180 cm low sideboard at 55 to 65 cm height, positioned on the main living-dining wall, can anchor a wall-mounted TV above it while providing the storage and surface function of a buffet below and around it.
What UAE Renters Need from Multi-Purpose Furniture
The 78-percent-renting reality of UAE residential life demands a specific kind of furniture: pieces that are visually neutral enough to work in different apartments, functional enough to eliminate secondary purchases, and robust enough to survive professional moves. A buffet-TV-unit hybrid meets all three criteria better than either standalone piece, provided it is chosen with the right dimensions and finish.
Our team regularly advises buyers in Deira, Al Qusais, and the older apartment stock of Bur Dubai that a single quality sideboard-media hybrid is a better long-term investment than a cheap TV unit plus a cheap buffet bought separately. The total cost may be similar or slightly higher, but the quality, the visual coherence, and the longevity are dramatically superior.
The Majlis and the Media Wall, A UAE-Specific Tension
In UAE homes with a traditional Arabic design influence, common in Sharjah, Ajman, Abu Dhabi residential suburbs, and in the homes of Emirati and Arab families throughout the country, there is a specific tension between the functional media wall and the decorative majlis corner. The majlis traditionally has no television: it is a space of conversation, hospitality, and calm. But in modern UAE family homes, the same room often serves as both the main TV viewing space and the receiving area for guests.
A wide, low sideboard that anchors the television on the upper wall while providing a surface below for traditional Arabic accessories, coffee service, incense burner, and dates arrangement resolves this tension elegantly. The TV recedes to a functional appliance above a piece of furniture that reads as hospitable and traditional in its lower register. The piece works in both modes simultaneously.
Browse our living room storage Dubai collection to see the specific pieces our team recommends for this dual-function role.
When to Choose a Dedicated TV Unit, a Dedicated Buffet, or a Combined Piece
The clearest framework for this decision is room size and room designation. Here is how our team thinks through it.

When a Dedicated TV Unit Is the Right Choice
A dedicated TV unit, a piece designed specifically to house a television and associated media equipment — is the right choice in exactly two UAE scenarios: first, when the room in question is a bedroom, where the TV function is primary and dining storage is irrelevant; and second, when the apartment is large enough (above 150 square metres) that the living and dining zones have genuinely separate walls with clear architectural distinction between them.
In a villa in Arabian Ranches or Jumeirah Golf Estates, where the dining room and the sitting room are separate rooms with a wall or doorway between them, a dedicated TV unit in the living room and a dedicated buffet in the dining room is entirely appropriate and optimal. You have the space, the room definitions are clear, and each piece can be chosen purely for its performance in its single role.
For most UAE apartment dwellers, however, this separation simply does not exist. The two-bedroom apartment in Al Barsha or the three-bedroom in Dubai Silicon Oasis rarely has a sitting room that is genuinely separate from the dining area, which means a dedicated TV unit creates a room with no dining storage, and a dedicated buffet creates a room with no clean TV anchoring solution.
When a Dedicated Buffet Is the Right Choice
A standalone dining buffet, without any TV or media storage function, is ideal in homes where the television is wall-mounted in a different room from the dining area, or in homes where screens are deliberately excluded from the dining and entertaining space. This is more common in Abu Dhabi family villas and in traditional Emirati and Arab households, where the dining room or majlis is kept deliberately screen-free as a social choice.
It is also the right choice for buyers who prioritise dining storage above all else: a dedicated buffet can be 45 to 50 cm deep (deep enough for full-sized serving dishes and warming equipment) in a way that a media-hybrid piece cannot, since deep pieces on a TV wall push the viewing distance uncomfortably far.
When a Combined Sideboard-Media Piece Is the Right Choice
The combined approach, a low sideboard (55 to 70 cm tall) placed on the primary wall of an open-plan living-dining room, with the TV wall-mounted above it, is the optimal choice for the majority of UAE apartment buyers in 2026. It applies when:
The apartment is a one, two, or three-bedroom open-plan layout (covering the vast majority of units in JVC, JLT, Business Bay, Downtown Dubai, Dubai Marina, Jumeirah Village Triangle, and comparable Abu Dhabi developments). The buyer wants a coherent visual design across both functional zones. Budget considerations favour one quality piece over two budget pieces. The room has a primary wall, typically the longest wall, opposite the balcony door, that can accommodate a 160 to 200 cm piece without blocking access to doors or windows.
Our multi-purpose buffet cabinet UAE range is specifically curated for this combined role, with depth, height, and construction specifications optimised for TV-above placement.
Dimensions: Getting the Numbers Right for a UAE Combined Piece

Height: The Critical Number for TV-Above Placement
The height of a combined sideboard-media piece is the most important dimension to calculate before purchasing. Here is the formula our team uses for every UAE installation:
The ideal viewing height for a television in a seated living room position places the centre of the screen at approximately 110 to 120 cm from the floor, based on an average sofa seat height of 40 to 45 cm and an upward viewing angle of 10 to 15 degrees.
If your sideboard is 60 cm tall, the bottom edge of your TV bracket should sit at 60 cm. A 55-inch television is approximately 70 cm tall. The centre of that screen lands at approximately 95 to 100 cm, slightly low but acceptable for a relaxed viewing position. A 65-inch television is approximately 80 cm tall, placing the screen centre at 100 to 105 cm, close to ideal.
If your sideboard is 75 cm tall (the upper end of the low-sideboard category), the same 65-inch TV centres at 115 cm, precisely in the optimal range.
The practical conclusion: for a UAE living room with standard 2.7-metre ceilings and a sofa at standard height, choose a combined sideboard between 60 and 75 cm tall, and plan for a 55 to 65-inch television above. Larger televisions (75 inches and above) centre too high for comfortable viewing when placed above a standard-height sideboard, and are better served by a floor-standing TV unit in a dedicated living room.
Width: Matching Your UAE Wall and Your Television
In an open-plan UAE apartment, the width of your combined sideboard should ideally be at least 30 cm wider than your television on each side. This creates a visual frame that makes the television look intentionally placed rather than simply resting above a piece that happened to be there.
For a 65-inch television (approximately 150 cm wide), a 180 to 200 cm sideboard provides the ideal visual proportion. For a 55-inch television (approximately 125 cm wide), a 160 to 180 cm sideboard is proportionally correct. For a 75-inch television (approximately 170 cm wide), you ideally need a sideboard of 220 cm or more, which will dominate the wall in any apartment under 130 square metres and should only be used in a spacious villa living room.
Depth: The Storage Trade-Off in a Combined Piece
Standard dining buffets run 40 to 45 cm deep. Standard TV units run 35 to 45 cm deep. A combined piece optimised for TV-above placement should sit between 35 and 42 cm deep: shallow enough not to push the viewing position uncomfortably far back, and deep enough to provide meaningful storage behind its doors.
The depth trade-off is real: a 38 cm deep sideboard will not hold a full-sized casserole dish or a large serving platter. If hosting capacity is important to your household, if you regularly entertain 15 or more guests in your apartment, you may find that a combined piece does not meet your dining storage needs and that a secondary narrow buffet in an adjacent position is necessary.
Our open plan living Dubai furniture guidance addresses this specific scenario with several two-piece solutions that work together visually while providing separate functional capacities.
The Best UAE Room Layouts for the Combined Approach
The Long-Wall Open-Plan: JVC, JLT, and Business Bay Standard
The most common UAE apartment configuration is a room where the living and dining areas are arranged laterally across a long wall, typically 4 to 6 metres of usable wall space facing the balcony. In this layout, a 180 to 200 cm sideboard occupies the centre of the long wall, the television sits above its centre, and the dining table is positioned either to the left or right of the sofa arrangement.
This layout is the most forgiving for a combined piece: the sideboard is visually centred in the room, anchors the TV symmetrically, and serves the dining area immediately to its side without requiring any awkward angles or routing. In JVC two-bedroom apartments and JLT three-bedroom units, this is the layout our delivery teams encounter most frequently, and a 180 cm low sideboard fits it almost universally.

The Corner Living-Dining: Common in Older Dubai and Sharjah Apartments
In older apartment buildings across Deira, Bur Dubai, Sharjah, and parts of Al Barsha, the living and dining areas are arranged in an L-shape around two walls that meet at a corner, rather than across a single long wall. This configuration makes the combined approach slightly more complex: the TV wall and the dining wall are perpendicular to each other.
In this scenario, we recommend placing the sideboard on the dining wall (typically the shorter wall) and mounting the TV on the living wall (typically the longer wall, which has sofa furniture directly facing it). The sideboard serves purely as a dining storage and display piece in this configuration, and a slim-profile TV console (or a wall bracket without a floor unit) handles the media function separately.
Alternatively, a corner sideboard, an L-shaped piece designed to wrap a 90-degree wall junction, can serve both functions simultaneously in this layout, though these are rarer and typically need to be custom-ordered.
The Studio and One-Bedroom: Dubai International City, Al Nahda, and Remraam
In a studio or one-bedroom apartment in Dubai, typically 35 to 55 square metres, the question of buffet versus TV unit becomes purely about economy of space. Our universal recommendation for this apartment size is a slim console sideboard: 90 to 120 cm wide, 30 to 35 cm deep, and 55 to 65 cm tall. It provides a modest amount of storage, anchors the TV above, and leaves enough wall space for a mirror and artwork on either side without overwhelming the room.
A slim console buffet for a Dubai apartment can be purchased for AED 900 to AED 2,200 from our collection, delivered and installed free of charge across all seven emirates. Browse our slim console buffet Dubai range for the full selection.
2026 Styling: Making Your Combined Sideboard-Media Piece Look Intentional

The most common mistake buyers make after choosing a combined piece is treating the surface like a utility shelf: remote controls, stacked DVDs, router equipment, charging cables, and the general accumulation of daily life. In a styled UAE interior in 2026, the surface of a sideboard under a television must be approached with the same intentionality as a coffee table or a mantelpiece.
Our 2026 surface styling formula for a combined sideboard:
Left third: One tall element (a sculptural vase, a potted plant, a stack of two or three design books). This anchors the piece visually from the side and prevents the TV from appearing to float without visual support.
Central section: Kept deliberately sparse. This is the breathing zone. The television above it reads more powerfully when the surface directly below it is not cluttered.
Right third: One practical, beautiful object. A brass tray holding the remote controls, a candle, and perhaps a small framed photograph. The tray is key: it contains the practical elements and turns them into a deliberate composition.
Cable management is non-negotiable in 2026. A single exposed HDMI cable running down the wall from a wall-mounted television destroys the visual integrity of the entire installation. Ensure your wall bracket installation includes an in-wall cable conduit, or choose a sideboard with a rear cable management channel that allows cables to route invisibly from the TV bracket down to the sideboard top and into the piece through a discreet grommet.
Budget Guide: Combined Sideboard-Media Piece in the UAE
| Budget Tier | Piece Description | AED Range | Best UAE Home Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry | Slim MDF console sideboard, melamine finish, basic soft-close | AED 750 to AED 1,800 | Studios and one-bedrooms in International City, Al Nahda, Remraam |
| Mid-Range | Two and three-bedroom apartments in JVC, JLT, Business Bay, and Al Barsha | AED 1,900 to AED 4,500 | Two and three-bedroom apartments in JVC, JLT, Business Bay, Al Barsha |
| Premium | Solid or high-grade veneer low sideboard, UV lacquer, brass hardware, LED interior | AED 4,600 to AED 10,000 | Villas in Arabian Ranches, Dubai Hills; large apartments in Dubai Marina, Palm Jumeirah |
All pieces in all tiers are delivered free and installed free across the UAE by our Karnak Home team. Our installers will mount your TV bracket at the correct height, route cable management, and position the sideboard levelled to your floor before leaving. Call +971 58 908 8107 to book.
Browse the full range across all tiers at our buffet in the living room, Dubai collection.
Eight Mistakes UAE Buyers Make with the Buffet-TV-Unit Decision

Mistake 1: Buying a TV unit that is too narrow and then discovering the sideboard that would look right on the same wall cannot fit alongside it. The combined approach eliminates this problem.
Fix: Choose one piece wide enough to anchor both functions, then add supplementary open shelving or a small cabinet on the side wall if additional storage is genuinely needed.
Mistake 2: Choosing a sideboard with a depth of 45 cm or more for a combined approach, which pushes the viewing sofa back an additional 15 cm and shortens the comfortable viewing distance in an apartment where the sofa-to-wall distance was already calculated for a 38 cm unit.
Fix: Confirm the depth of your combined piece and recalculate your sofa position before delivery.
Mistake 3: Placing a full-height (85 to 90 cm) buffet under a wall-mounted TV and then discovering that the centre of the screen sits above 145 cm from the floor — uncomfortably high for a seated viewer in a standard sofa at 42 cm seat height.
Fix: For TV-above placement, choose pieces 55 to 70 cm tall. Full-height buffets belong in dining rooms without TV mounting requirements.
Mistake 4: Ignoring cable management until after installation and then attempting to add in-wall cable channels after the wall has been painted and decorated. In UAE apartments with concrete walls, post-installation cable routing is a chasing exercise that damages plasterwork.
Fix: Decide on cable routing before the TV bracket is fixed. Instruct your installation team to include conduit before the bracket plate is fixed to the wall.
Mistake 5: Buying a combined piece online without confirming lift dimensions and then discovering on delivery day that a 200 cm wide sideboard cannot enter the lift in their building in Deira or parts of Bur Dubai. This is the same measurement mistake covered in our pillar guide, but it is especially costly with combined pieces because they are typically the largest single furniture item in the apartment.
Fix: Always measure your lift’s interior width, depth, and height, and share them with our team before ordering any piece above 150 cm wide.
Mistake 6: Assuming that the wall behind where the combined piece will sit can carry a TV bracket without checking the construction. In UAE apartment buildings, the primary living room wall is almost always reinforced concrete, ideal for wall mounting. But in some older buildings and in certain partition configurations, the available wall may be hollow-core block or plasterboard on a metal frame, which cannot carry a 25-kilogram television without specialist fixings.
Fix: Tap the wall before booking your installation. A hollow sound means non-structural material. Our installation team can advise on specialist fixings for non-concrete walls.
Mistake 7: Choosing a combined piece in a strong statement colour and then discovering that the room needs to be repainted around it when the lease ends or when the buyer wants to sell. In UAE rental properties, landlords typically repaint between tenants in neutral tones, which may clash with a bold-colour sideboard left behind.
Fix: If you are in a rental property and using a combined piece as a long-term investment, choose a finish in warm neutral tones: walnut, warm oak, linen white, or stone grey. Save bold colour choices for owner-occupied homes.
Mistake 8: Not testing the quality of the soft-close drawer and door mechanisms before accepting delivery. In a UAE apartment where a combined piece may be opened and closed 20 to 30 times a day (media storage accessed constantly, dining storage used for every meal), a low-quality hinge or drawer runner will fail within 12 to 18 months. Always open and close every drawer and door on delivery before the team leaves.
Fix: Our installation team at Karnak waits for your confirmation before leaving. Test everything in front of them. If anything is not right, we fix it before departure.
Frequently Asked Questions About Buffets and TV Units in UAE Homes

FAQ 1: Can a buffet be used as a TV unit in a Dubai apartment?
Yes, and in most UAE two and three-bedroom open-plan apartments it is the superior solution. A low buffet (55 to 70 cm tall) placed on the primary wall of an open-plan space, with the TV wall-mounted above it, gives you the storage function of a dedicated buffet and the media anchoring of a dedicated TV unit in a single piece. The key specifications are: height must be calculated to place the screen centre at 110 to 120 cm from the floor, depth should not exceed 42 cm to preserve the sofa viewing distance, and width should ideally be at least 30 cm wider than the television on each side. Our TV unit sideboard combo UAE collection is specifically curated for this dual role.
FAQ 2: What height should a sideboard be if I want to mount a TV above it?
For a standard UAE apartment with a sofa at 40 to 44 cm seat height and a 55 to 65-inch television, choose a sideboard between 55 and 70 cm tall. At 60 cm, a 65-inch TV (approximately 80 cm tall) will centre the screen at approximately 100 to 105 cm from the floor, slightly below the 110 to 120 cm ideal, but comfortable for a relaxed living room position. At 70 cm, the same television centres at approximately 110 cm, exactly optimal. Full-height buffets (80 to 90 cm) are not appropriate for TV-above placement in standard UAE rooms as they push the screen too high for comfortable seated viewing.
FAQ 3: Should I buy a separate TV unit and a separate buffet for my Dubai apartment?
Only if your apartment is large enough to have clearly distinct living and dining rooms with their own separate walls, typically 160 square metres or above for a villa, or in any floor plan where the dining room has a door that physically separates it from the living area. For the vast majority of UAE two and three-bedroom apartments in JVC, JLT, Business Bay, Dubai Marina, and comparable developments, a combined low sideboard is the more functional, more economical, and more aesthetically coherent choice. Two separate pieces in an open-plan apartment that was not designed to hold them create visual clutter and often leave one wall overcrowded while another is bare.
FAQ 4: What size combined sideboard suits a two-bedroom apartment in Dubai?
For a standard two-bedroom Dubai apartment, typically 85 to 110 square metres with a living-dining area of 30 to 40 square metres, a combined piece between 160 cm and 180 cm wide, 60 to 70 cm tall, and 38 to 42 cm deep is the practical optimum. This width proportionally balances a 55 to 65-inch television above it (the standard screen size for a room of this scale), provides storage capacity for both media accessories and dining items, and fits comfortably on the primary wall of the room without blocking adjacent doors or windows. Our team can confirm the exact fit for your specific apartment on WhatsApp at +971 58 908 8107 with a floor plan photo.
FAQ 5: Does Karnak install the TV bracket as part of free installation?
Our installation service covers the full combined setup: delivery, sideboard assembly and levelling, TV bracket wall mounting (on confirmed structural walls), and cable management guidance. Our team carries standard TV bracket hardware suitable for UAE concrete walls. For specialist bracket types (full-motion, articulating, ultra-slim) please advise us at the point of booking so we can bring the correct equipment. We cover all UAE emirates, including Dubai, Sharjah, Abu Dhabi, Ajman, Ras Al Khaimah, Fujairah, and Umm Al Quwain. Contact us at +971 58 908 8107 to confirm your installation appointment.
FAQ 6: What is the best finish for a sideboard used as a TV unit in a UAE apartment?
For a combined piece that will be used as both a TV anchor and a dining storage unit in a UAE rental apartment, the most practical 2026 finish choices are warm oak veneer, walnut veneer, and warm white lacquer. These three finishes work across the broadest range of apartment colour schemes, photograph well for resale listings, and age gracefully in UAE conditions. Avoid a high-gloss finish directly below a television: the reflective surface will create distracting light bounces from the TV screen during viewing. A matte or satin sheen is more appropriate for any surface in the direct visual field of a television.
FAQ 7: How do I prevent the area around a TV-above sideboard from looking cluttered?
Cable management is the most impactful single step: a single in-wall cable conduit running from the TV bracket to a grommet in the sideboard top costs AED 100 to AED 250 installed and transforms the wall from messy to architectural. For the sideboard surface itself, follow the rule of thirds described in our pillar guide: left anchor, central negative space, right practical composition. Avoid placing any item directly behind or below the television on the surface; this zone should be visually clear to give the TV the space it needs to read as intentional rather than crammed. Finally, keep media equipment (streaming boxes, game consoles) inside the sideboard behind doors rather than on the surface.
FAQ 8: Can a sideboard work as a TV unit in a traditional Arabic-style UAE home?
Yes, with a careful choice of piece. In a traditional Arabic-influenced interior, common in Sharjah and Abu Dhabi family villas and in the homes of Emirati families, the sideboard surface carries significant hospitality meaning: it is where the Arabic coffee service, the dates, and the incense accessories are displayed. Placing a television directly above this surface does not conflict with this tradition, provided the sideboard itself is chosen in a finish that reads as warm and respectful: dark walnut, warm oak, or a richly toned lacquer rather than a cold grey or stark white. The television is a functional tool in this context; the sideboard surface below it is the hospitable, decorative register of the room. Browse our sideboard living room Dubai apartment range for pieces suited to this combination.
Conclusion
The buffet-versus-TV-unit question resolves itself simply once you accept the fundamental reality of UAE open-plan living: in most apartments across Dubai, Sharjah, and Abu Dhabi, you do not have enough wall space to do both jobs separately, and you should not try to. A well-chosen low sideboard in the 160 to 200 cm range, placed on your primary wall at 60 to 70 cm tall, will anchor a wall-mounted television above it and serve your dining storage needs below, and it will do both jobs more elegantly, more functionally, and more economically than two separate pieces ever could.
The UAE home is a small, busy, socially active place. Families move frequently, rooms do multiple jobs simultaneously, and every furniture purchase must earn its floor space. The combined sideboard-media approach is not a compromise; it is an intelligent adaptation to the specific demands of UAE living in 2026. It is the answer that 70,000 Karnak families have arrived at across 36 years of furnishing UAE homes, and it is the answer our team will give you the moment you describe your apartment layout to us.
Visit our showroom in Industrial Area, Sharjah, any day Saturday to Thursday between 9 AM and 9 PM. Bring your measurements, or WhatsApp them to us at +971 58 908 8107. We will have the right piece ready for you before you arrive.
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Ready to Solve Your Buffet vs TV Unit Dilemma in Your UAE Home?
You’ve now seen why most UAE open-plan apartments in 2026 thrive with a single combined sideboard-media piece; it delivers dining storage below and TV anchoring above, saves space, looks cohesive, and handles majlis hospitality, family entertaining, and rental moves perfectly. Pair your choice with complementary pieces that include free delivery, free installation, free consultation, and expert measurements across Dubai, Sharjah, Abu Dhabi, and beyond.
- → Buffets & Sideboards – Low combined sideboard-media designs ideal for UAE open-plan living with TV-above placement and dining storage
- → TV Media Units – Dedicated media units perfect for bedrooms or large villas with separate living-dining zones
- → Living Room Furniture – Full open-plan collections that integrate your combined piece seamlessly into majlis and family spaces
- → Sofas & Loveseats – Corner and modular sofas that position perfectly opposite your sideboard-media wall for optimal viewing
- → Coffee Tables – Matching centre tables that complete the flow between the sofa and the combined buffet-TV area
- → Consoles – Slim consoles for smaller studios or secondary walls in JVC/JLT apartments
- → Display Units – Open display cabinets, adding height and storage beside your combined piece in larger homes
- → Bookcases – Adjustable bookcases providing extra organisation in multigenerational UAE setups around the media wall
- → Accent Chairs – Stylish chairs enhancing conversation zones in majlis-integrated living areas
- → Dining Tables – Tables sized to pair with your buffet storage for efficient open-plan dining
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