1. Home Theater Ticket Booth Hidden Door
If
you are big fan of unique hidden doors and cool home theaters, the Home
Theater Ticket Booth Door from Creative Building Resources (CBR)
combines the best of both worlds. CBR's elaborate hidden door features a
programmable, scrolling LED sign built into the top of the frame, while
the interior of the hidden door functions like your traditional ticket
booth, complete with recessed lighting. On the front of the ticket
booth, a detailed wood inlay displays the high level of craftsmanship
involved in constructing this hidden passageway, although we'd recommend
ditching the frosted comedy and tragedy faces on the front ticket booth
glass. For those who intend to staff the ticket booth, or at least fill
it with a costume-draped dummy, the interior is accessed through a full
sized cabinet door at the back. As this hidden door is a custom
creation from CBR, we'd recommend ordering yours to match your own home
theater decor.
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2. Bookcase Hidden Door
The
room showed above is one couples' unusually creative gift to their very
excited teenage daughter. The bookcase, holding rows of books, a
stuffed dachshund and a volleyball, silently swung outward, revealing a
tiny, well-lighted room. Containing a desk, a chair and a laptop
computer, it serves as her study area.
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3. Staircase Hidden Door
When
Louise Kircher, a retired teacher, and her husband, Dennis, a former
accounting manager at Boeing, moved into their year-old,
4,300-square-foot contemporary home in Mesa, Ariz., the staircase in the
master bedroom was something extra that came with the house. It rises
to reveal a hidden room, where she and her husband store an antique
bedroom set and a replica of a gilded mummy's coffin. A remote control
amazingly lifts an entire staircase out of the way revealing the hidden
passage.
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4. Drawer Hidden Vault
To
make sure your hidden door stays hidden, Creative Home Engineering
offers a number of non-traditional hiding machines. Sure, they've got
the standard revolving bookcase and sliding wall panels. But, the
company also constructs hidden doors from grandfather clocks,
fireplaces, paintings, stairwells, and other household fixtures. They
also offer an option that allows your hidden door to double as a vault
door, so your valuables stay double protected. Priced from $5-$250K,
you'll probably want to make sure you've really got something big to
protect to make the purchase worth your while. But, even if you don't,
Creative Home Engineering claims that a quality hidden door can make a
solid investment from an appreciation standpoint.
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5. Mat Hidden Wine Cellar
Ever
wanted a wine cellar but didn't have the space or money to build one?
The Spiral Cellars design/build firm will dig a hole right in whatever
room you want your cellar in and haul the dirt right out the front door.
In the remaining void they infill a highly functionally and visually
dazzling spiral-staircase wine cellar to fit all your favorite vintages
and go with your favorite funky furniture designs. The cellars are kept
at ideal temperatures, insulated on the sides and top. Cool air is piped
in and warm air is piped out. Even when no air flow is needed for
temperature purposes it is kept moving to keep the air fresh. Customers
have had these installed in all kinds of ways, from flush- and
hidden-door versions to entrances that intentionally boast their
presence.
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6. Narnia-like Wardrobe Hidden Playroom
This
wardrobe is actually a secret entrance to a playroom. The owner of the
house had the wardrobe and figured he might as well add a touch of magic
to the house for a pretty amazing result. Sorry, lion and witch sold
separately. Still, the stage is set much like many of us imagined when
we read the children's classic as kids: a dark-painted room with
wood-trimmed windows and antique wooden furniture, with a large dresser
that looks strangely both foreboding and inviting.
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7. Fire place Hidden Door
Also another creation from Creative Home Engineering
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8. Staircase Hidden Door
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9. Victorian Façade Hidden Garage
McMills
Construction approached Beausoleil Architects for help installing a
garage in the bottom floor of a property on Oak Street in San
Francisco's Upper Haight district in order to maximize the tenant's
rent. By hiding the space behind a retractable facade indistinguishable
from the rest of the historic Victorian apartment house, they were able
to avoid running afoul of the city planning department strict appearance
codes.
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10. Painted Wall Hidden Door
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