Years ago, I remember sharing a room reveal and one of the first comments I received was along the lines of: “The room reveal is great, but where are you storing your kids’ shoes and backpacks?” I remember being a bit flabbergasted that THAT was the question after sharing so many creative solutions in the post. But all these years later, that comment has stuck with me because it hits on what we all really want to know: 

How do you store all the “nuisance but necessary” items of life so they are “put away” but also totally accessible? 

Carving out some sort of “mudroom” is actually one of the very first projects I tackle each time we move into a new home. Because if I don’t…the shoes and backpacks and coats and papers become a serious problem…and fast! Read on to see the clever spot we outfitted this time around!

Megan from The Homes I Have Made going though a blue basket in a mudroom

Sliding Door Dilemma

In our current home, there was zero space for a “drop zone,” except for one small closet right inside the garage door.

But it had one (serious) problem…

Sliding doors.

A foyer closet with two sliding doors

Gah – I hate sliding closet doors!

Because half of the closet is always “closed” at any given time, it’s really difficult to access (and therefore optimally organize!) anything inside. 

(Admit it. It’s just too easy to slide the door open a few inches, stuff things inside, and close it again! Am I right?!?)

Plus, with sliding the doors back and forth and back and forth, they constantly fall off their rails, making it even MORE difficult to open the closet at all!

Are you sensing my exasperation?

So we took the doors down.

And suddenly, we had a big(ish) blank canvas for a family drop zone!

A closet turned into a cute mudroom with blue and white wallpaper, dry-erase calendar and blue baskets inside a white cubby shelf

Fun Fact: I pulled this “makeover” off using 100% items we already owned! So this one was functional AND thrifty!

Turning a Closet Into a Mudroom

This closet is not large, measuring about 45” wide and 24″ deep.

But without the doors blocking half the closet, it meant I could outfit the full area exactly as we needed.

A closet turned into a cute mudroom with blue and white wallpaper, dry-erase calendar and blue baskets inside a white cubby shelf

I started by wallpapering the closet wall with two rolls of paper I had on hand, simply because I am me and I can’t resist a patterned nook. 

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While the wallpaper isn’t necessary, the change in wall color does help visually set the closet off as its own dedicated spot.

Next, we put a 2×2 Kallax into the corner (mounted on feet to make it counter height) and filled the cubbies with baskets for shoes, purses, and our stash reusable grocery bags.

Blue wire baskets on a white cubby shelf in a closet mudroom
A blue metal basket full of shoes and socks

Why didn’t I use a (taller) 4×2 Kallax for even more cubbies? It certainly would have fit! 

I opted for the shorter shelf because we like having a “counter” to drop mail/keys/hats and hold items we always seem to reach for as we walk out the door (e.g., sunscreen, daily medications, inhaler.)

We love cubbies for kids’ shoes (and socks!) but they are NOT great for backpacks. So putting a set of hooks right at kid height allows the little boys to hang up their backpacks when they come in the door.

Above the hooks are my favorite felt bulletin board tiles

We’ve used these in home after home, as they are such a chic way to display kids artwork, important reminders, and things we can’t lose track of. 

At the start of every month, I usually clear it off and we add to it (straight from the kids’ backpacks!) all month long.

Finally, we mounted a clear acrylic “frame” (repurposed from this project) to the left side, behind which we stick a non-dated calendar (using double-sided tape). 

A dry-erase calendar hung on a wall in a mini mudroom

We populate the calendar with important dates and events (with a white chalk marker) to be a quick reference for the whole family.

All together, this closet is a super functional and happy way to corral that “mess” that comes in the door every single day.

And to think…none of it would have been possible if those terrible doors stayed in place!

A closet turned into a cute mudroom with blue and white wallpaper, dry-erase calendar and blue baskets inside a white cubby shelf

Key Takeaways

Megan from The Homes I Have Made going though a blue basket in a mudroom

While a “mudroom” can certainly be established on any bare wall, tucking it into a closet keeps it 100% out of the way of foot traffic and makes it feel like a separate, dedicated area.

Adding in decorative details and specific furniture really helps a drop zone look purposeful (rather than a mess shoved into an empty closet!)

And finally, you can leave doors on a “mudroom” closet, but removing them will give you much more space to work with. And since the inside of the closet is always visible, it forces you to create a setup that looks good (and keep it that way!)

Dive Deeper Into This Project

Looking for more info on this project? Below are my voice notes about where we store all the closet doors we take off and what we do with coats now that our coat closet is repurposed!

See You Soon!
Megan