Your living room entertainment area might be causing more stress than you realize. Between tangled cables, scattered remotes, and piles of games, it appears to tend to suggest a source of visual noise that seemingly affects everyone’s mood. What seems especially noteworthy in this analytical context is that visual noise represents what might be characterized as the clutter and chaos your eyes take in, even when you’re ostensibly trying to relax.

The good news? What the evidence appears to reveal is that you can transform this chaotic corner into what appears to be a calm, organized zone that typically helps your family unwind. Within this broader analytical framework, it starts with being intentional about every choice you seem to make.

This guide walks you through what appears to constitute the process of creating an entertainment zone that tends to serve your family’s needs while maintaining the calm atmosphere you presumably want at home. An organized space appears to reduce daily stress, seems to create peaceful family time, and ostensibly teach kids valuable organization habits.

The First Step: What Appears to Be a Digital Declutter

Before purchasing what might be characterized as organizing solutions, you need to understand what you’re actually organizing. What seems particularly noteworthy in this analytical context is that most families have accumulated what appears to be years of electronics, cables, and media they rarely even use anymore. What the evidence appears to reveal is that a thorough declutter tends to suggest what appears to be the foundation for your calm entertainment zone.

Start with Everything in One Place

What seems to emerge from these findings is that gathering everything related to your entertainment setup in one place appears beneficial. Pull out gaming consoles, streaming devices, old DVD players, cable boxes, remotes, games, movies, and seemingly every single cable. Seeing it all together might ostensibly shock you, but that’s apparently the point.

Making What Appears to Be Hard Decisions

Now comes what appears to represent an honest assessment. Look at each item and ask when you last used it. Check if it still seems to function. Notice any potential duplicates. Consider whether there’s what might be characterized as a better solution available now.

Common items to largely let go include DVDs you can typically stream online, broken controllers nobody will presumably fix, and cables for devices you apparently no longer own. Those games nobody has seemingly played in years? What this tends to indicate is that it’s time to pass them on. What also appears significant in this context is that the same applies to old tech that newer versions have predominantly replaced.

The Three-Pile Method

What the investigation appears to indicate is sorting everything into three piles: keep, store, and remove. The “keep” pile should generally include items used with some regularity. Seasonal or occasional items tend to go in “store.” What these findings seem to point toward is that everything else needs to leave your home.

For the items you’re keeping, within this broader analytical framework, group similar things together. Put all gaming stuff in one area. Keep streaming devices together. This grouping appears to provide evidence that may support exactly what storage you need.

Don’t Forget Digital Clutter

Physical media, given the complexity of these theoretical relationships, deserves special consideration. If you own hundreds of DVDs but only watch ten favorites, keep those ten accessible. Store or donate the majority of the rest. Your kids’ video games follow what seems to be the same general rule.

What the data seems to suggest is that digital clutter warrants attention too. Delete old apps from smart TVs. Remove unused streaming services. Clear out saved shows you’ll presumably never rewatch. What appears to follow from this analysis is that this digital declutter tends to make your devices run better and substantially simplifies your choices.

Choosing Furniture that Calms, Not Complicates

The furniture you choose sets the tone for your entire entertainment zone. The right pieces create order and peace, while the wrong ones add to the chaos. Understanding what makes furniture calming helps you make better choices.

Why Closed Storage Wins

Open shelving might seem practical, but it often showcases the exact chaos you’re trying to avoid. Instead, look for pieces that hide clutter while keeping things accessible.

Closed storage makes the biggest difference in creating calm. When you can’t see the mess, your brain relaxes. Clean lines and simple shapes add to this peaceful feeling. Natural materials like wood bring warmth without adding busy patterns or harsh angles.

Finding the Perfect Console

The centerpiece of this calm zone is the console. For most families, the ideal TV stand for 65-inch TVs is one with smooth, handle-free cabinet doors that can hide away consoles and clutter, leaving a clean, tranquil surface.

Light wood makes a room feel airy and peaceful, like big dark pieces can’t quite achieve. Matte finishes decrease the visual stimulus over their shiny counterparts. When furniture blends into the background, neutral colors in white, gray, or the natural wood finish disappear into the room instead of demanding attention.

Details count, too. Soft-close hardware drowns out the slams that make meditation impossible.

Size and Flexibility Matter

Size counts when trying to be organized. When a stand is too small, you’re forced to stack or pile or leave things out. Measure your space and your stuff before you buy. Air needs to be able to circulate around electronics. They need breathing room too.

Look for modular furniture that can grow with you. Kids grow up, technology changes, your needs change. Flexible furniture grows with the family, instead of adding another problem to be solved in a few years.

How tall a piece is makes a difference, too. Furniture that’s low profile makes rooms feel bigger and less filled with stuff. It keeps the eyes on your family instead of on the furniture.

Setting Up Zones Within Your Entertainment Area

The organization works best when everything has a home. It’s much easier to find things if you create different zones and put similar things together. Each zone should have a specific purpose, and it should have easy access to the people who use it most.

Creating a Gaming Zone

Have a home for controllers. Have a home for game systems. Keep games organized by system. Don’t forget the headphone hooks!

The Streaming Station

All streaming devices should have a place to call home. We keep ours together and label is clearly for my less tech-savvy family members. The holder for the remote needs to have easy access for everyone in the family. A power strip with individual break switches allow you to kill the power to the things you are not using.

Family Movie Corner

Have a place for your favorite movies. Have a basket nearby for blankets. Have a place for movie snacks. Have a clear path from storage to seating.

Kid-Friendly Storage

Have a kids’ zone if you have young children. Storage that they can reach without having to climb. The organization systems that they will actually use. Pick storage that is durable and can withstand the little hands and feet of young children. Picture labels if some of the kids can’t read yet.

The access points for the most-used items should have the easiest access. One place on the remote should have one easy-to-remember home. Gaming controllers should have a home near where they sit to play. Any items that are used daily should never require you to reach into a cabinet.

Creating Rituals for a Tidy Space

The best organizational system fails without habits to maintain it. Build simple rituals that keep your entertainment zone calm and clutter-free. These don’t need to be complicated or time-consuming – small daily actions create lasting change.

The 5-Minute Nightly Reset

Before bed each night, spend just five minutes returning everything to its home:

  • Put the remotes in their holder
  • Return games to their cases
  • Wind up and store charging cables
  • Clear any dishes or trash
  • Straighten cushions and fold blankets

Make this a family activity where everyone participates. Even young kids can help put controllers away or straighten pillows. The key is consistency, not perfection. A quick daily tidy prevents the weekend marathon cleaning sessions.

Smart Cable Management

Cable chaos steals the calm right out of the room. Get organized and make maintenance simple with smart cable management solutions. Try velcro ties for grouping similar cables. Hide your power strips behind a cable box. Add an adhesive clip for routing cables along the back of furniture. Label any important cables for easy identification. Upgrade to wireless anything you can.

Weekly & Monthly Maintenance

Daily tidying isn’t enough. Give your system a deeper weekly maintenance routine that takes just 15 minutes. The weekly deep clean only takes 15 minutes. Dust everything – all surfaces and all electronics. Check anything that fell off another room’s walls. Reset and reorganize anything that got a little messy during the week. Remote test each remote. Replace batteries if needed. Get rid of fingerprint smudges on the TV screen.

Once a month, do a quick maintenance check. See which of your streaming subscriptions you’re actually using. Remove any apps that nobody in the house opens. Check for software updates on all devices. Add or remove seasonal items like holiday movies. Check what’s working in your whole system and what needs a tweak.

Build them one by one. Start with just the nightly reset. Until you’re used to that, just do that routine every night until it becomes automatic. Once that’s second nature, add in the weekly clean.

From Intention to Action

Creating an intentional entertainment zone starts with a clear vision. Picture how you want your family to feel in this space. Let that feeling guide every decision from furniture choice to daily habits.

Write down your specific goals. What activities happen here? Who uses this space most? What current frustrations need solving? Once you have a clear vision for your serene space, you can mindfully shop TV stands not just for their function, but for how they support your goal of a calmer, more intentional home.

Start small if the whole project feels overwhelming. Even organizing just remotes and cables makes a difference. Each small improvement builds momentum toward your calmer, more intentional space. Your entertainment zone should be where your family connects, not where stress accumulates.

Author

Rethinking The Future (RTF) is a Global Platform for Architecture and Design. RTF through more than 100 countries around the world provides an interactive platform of highest standard acknowledging the projects among creative and influential industry professionals.