Around The Home

Modular guitar racks designed for the living room

View 4 Images
The DRS Racks instrument storage system is modular, stackable and aesthetically-pleasing enough to grace any living room
The Bravo rack can take up to seven instruments and features four pins to allow the Alpha unit to be positioned on top
For players with more vertical living room space than horizontal, the DRS Racks system allows Rack A to be mounted on top of Rack B
The "furniture grade" DRS Racks are constructed using strong, solid, environmentally-sustainable bamboo and a padded base
The DRS Racks instrument storage system is modular, stackable and aesthetically-pleasing enough to grace any living room
View gallery - 4 images

Many guitarists are also gear-head collectors and will likely have more than a few instruments lying about in a spare room, basement studio or loft conversion. The tidier among us may even have our most-used axes lined up and ready to rock in a guitar rack. But a rack in the living room? Unlikely. However, DRS Racks' modular storage system may just be attractive and practical enough to take center stage in the home's main living space.

The DRS Racks system comes in two flavors, the Alpha and the Bravo. The "furniture grade" racks are shipped flat-packed and assembled in the home using a single included Allen wrench. They're both constructed using strong, solid, environmentally-sustainable bamboo and a padded base When assembled, they're freestanding and don't require any unsightly anchoring.

The modular, stackable storage system has been designed to give players a few placement options. The Alpha ground unit can hold up to seven instruments and is priced at US$399. The Bravo rack is described as the unit that makes the system modular. It too takes up to seven bass, acoustic or electric guitars but features four pins to allow the Alpha unit to be positioned on top. The Bravo is priced at $499.

For players with more vertical living room space than horizontal, the DRS Racks system allows Rack A to be mounted on top of Rack B

Those with more horizontal living room space could opt for multiple ground units, but those graced with high ceilings could choose to stack instead. A combined A/B rack can also be purchased for $799.

As good-looking and functional as the DRS Racks units are, I'm not sure I could convince my significant other that the living room is the best place for my own small collection of wood and metal. Worth a try though ...

Source: DRS Racks

View gallery - 4 images
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Flipboard
  • LinkedIn
3 comments
javadog
OK if you were single, otherwise it would be too easy for unsupervised children and knucklehead relatives to pull out one to play with while you weren't home , start twanging away, put greasy fingerprints all over it, and drop it on the floor. "While I was sitting here minding my own business, one of your guitars, the most expensive one that can't be replaced, fell out of your fancy rack by itself and the neck broke off...what are the chances of that ?"
windykites
An attractive display stand, but unfortunately the guitars will end up covered in dust, as the months roll by. They really need to be in a glass cabinet.
dbenware
This rack reminds me of a gun rack I've seen in many rifle ranges and an few homes