Modular Sideboards

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Sale price$259.99
Belleze Set of 2 31" Modular Sideboards with Geometric Arched DoorsBelleze Set of 2 31" Modular Sideboards with Geometric Arched Doors
Belleze Set of 3 31" Modular Sideboards with Geometric Arched DoorsBelleze Set of 3 31" Modular Sideboards with Geometric Arched Doors
Belleze Set of 4 31" Modular Sideboards with Geometric Arched DoorsBelleze Set of 4 31" Modular Sideboards with Geometric Arched Doors
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Why One Sideboard Never Feels Right

Living rooms collect clutter fast. Toys, chargers, candles, remotes, and paperwork pile up on coffee tables and in corners. The more you organize, the messier it gets.

Most homes have two kinds of stuff: things you want to show off (books, plants, ceramics) and things you want to hide (cables, files, kid's toys). A fixed sideboard struggles to handle both.

Then there's the size problem. A 60-inch sideboard under a 12-foot wall looks awkward. Too much empty space on either side makes the room feel unfinished.

And what happens when you move or your needs change? That sideboard you bought five years ago no longer fits the new space.

How Modular Sideboards Solve These Problems

Storage That Spreads Out, Not Up

Tall cabinets eat up wall space and make rooms feel smaller. Modular sideboards spread storage horizontally. Each unit holds plenty on its own. Line up two, three, or four units and you get built-in-style storage without the renovation.

Mix Display and Hidden Storage

Pick modules based on what you need:

  • Wood door units hide clutter completely
  • Glass door units show off books and ceramics
  • Drawer units keep small items organized

Combine them however you want. Glass in the middle for display. Wood doors on the sides to hide the mess. The Jagger Collection makes mixing easy since all units share the same height, depth, and design language.

Width That Fits Your Wall

  • Set of 2 works for 8-10 foot walls
  • Set of 3 covers most living room main walls
  • Set of 4 fills 12-14 foot walls properly

Same finish, same hardware, same proportions. Your setup looks intentional, not pieced together.

Built to Change With You

Start with a single unit or Set of 2. Add more later. The standardized dimensions mean new pieces match what you already have.

Today it's a dining room sideboard. Tomorrow it becomes a modular entertainment center in the living room. Next year it might serve as entryway storage in a new house. You don't have to replace everything when life changes.

Find Your Setup

If hiding clutter is the priority, start with wood door units. Set of 2 or Set of 3 handles most spaces. If you want display and storage in one row, pair glass doors with wood doors or drawers. This combo covers what most families actually need.

If future expansion matters, begin with a single module or Set of 2. You can always add more. Choose your wall width first. Then pick your door style. The rest falls into place.

FAQ

How many modular sideboards do I need for my space?

Most shoppers start with a single modular sideboard for small rooms. A set of 2 works well under a TV or along a shorter wall. If you want a full storage wall or a strong focal point, go for a set of 3 or set of 4 modular sideboards. That gives you enough length to balance a large TV, a long sofa wall, or an open dining room.

Whatโ€™s the difference between wood-door, glass-door, and drawer modular sideboards?

Each front style has a clear job:

  • Wood-door modular sideboards hide clutter and keep the room looking calm.
  • Glass-door modular sideboards are better when you want to display books, decor, or dishes.
  • Drawer modular sideboards hold smaller items like linens, chargers, paperwork, and game accessories.

In this collection you’ll find:

  1. All-wood-door sets
  2. All-glass-door sets
  3. All-drawer sets
  4. Mixed 2+1 combinations like:
  • 2 glass-door cabinets + 1 drawer cabinet
  • 2 drawer cabinets + 1 glass-door cabinet
  • 2 wood-door cabinets + 1 drawer cabinet
  • 2 wood-door cabinets + 1 glass-door cabinet
  • 2 glass-door cabinets + 1 wood-door cabinet
  • 2 drawer cabinets + 1 wood-door cabinet

So you can pick a modular sideboard layout that fits how much you want to show and how much you want to hide.

Can I mix and match different modular sideboard styles?

Mixing is mainly designed around the Jagger modular sideboards. Within the Jagger collection, modules share the same height and depth, so wood-door, glass-door, and drawer units line up into one clean row. That’s how the 2+1 sets are built.

For other modular sideboard series in this collection (like Libra and the 31–35–33 inch modern modular sideboards), you choose between single units, set of 2, set of 3, or set of 4 within the same design. They are modular in length, but not meant to be mixed across different series.

If you want a fully mixed front (wood + glass + drawers in one run), Jagger modular sideboards are the safest choice.

Will a modular sideboard stay stable when I connect multiple pieces?

Yes. Each modular sideboard is made as a standalone cabinet with a stable base. When you place two, three, or four pieces side by side, the footprint grows wider, which actually improves stability.

On carpet or in homes with kids, wall anchors are recommended for extra safety, just like with any long storage unit. Many customers use Jagger modular sideboards in set of 2, set of 3, or set of 4 as a low storage wall or media console without issues.

How much storage can a modular sideboard hold?

A single modular sideboard has deep compartments and adjustable shelves for dishes, serving pieces, books, or toys. Drawer units handle smaller items so they don’t roll around. A set of 3 modular sideboards already feels like a built-in storage wall in most living rooms. A set of 4 gives even more capacity for open-plan spaces or shared family rooms.

Think of it this way:

  • 1 unit → small room or entry
  • set of 2 → sofa wall, compact dining area
  • set of 3–4 → full storage wall that can double as buffet, TV console, and display