Hi! I thought it would be fun to have a thread for those of us who will be raising baby in a small house or apartment.

Introduce yourself and share your plans, thoughts, concerns. STM: please give us tips, products, encouragement, etc. that will make our lives easier and keep the clutter minimal.
Re: Anybody bringing baby home to a small house or apt?
Some people say that we are going to want to move to a big house in the burbs once the baby comes, but I think we can make it work. I love the idea of passing this lifestyle down to our kids, and teaching them the joy of living minimally. I'm also excited about finding furniture, baby supplies, toys, etc. that take up little space, serve multi purposes, or fold up easily. Would love to hear tips from moms who are already making it work in a small house or apartment.
We are definitely raising the baby in a small-ish house. We live in the city, and while we love being able to walk to the park, restaurants, stores, etc---we do have to sacrifice space to stay within our rent budget. In mid-January of this year, we found an amazing deal: craftsman duplex, we would have the upper unit...with a gorgeous deck overlooking Balboa Park golf course. We love the space, especially the living spaces, but the bedrooms are tighter than we'd like, and we only have 1 bathroom. Waaaah!
We also have my stepkids every other weekend (4 nights a month), and they will be sharing the second bedroom with the baby.... so I'm gonna have to get really creative with planning out the space.
Speaking of small living arrangements, I've been looking and looking and researching mini-cribs... I'd prefer the ones with casters! If anyone has any input on them (good or bad), I'd love to hear it!
When DD was born we were in a very small 2br house that was a campground office in a previous incarnation, and there was not one single closet for storage so we had to get really creative with that. We ended up putting up a divider in our bedroom and made the space behind it the "nursery nook" still no changing table, but we got a crib, small dresser, shelf, and rocking chair in there.
Now we bought a 3br house, thinking we were done after two kids. Oops. Baby will be in our room the first few months, and then sharing with either big brother or big sister after that until we decide to move to a bigger house.
Currently in a 1,000sq ft, 3 floor townhouse and while I know it's going to seem to shrink, I like the size. I feel like we are doing a good job keeping the toddlers stuff spread out how it works for us (some toys in the living room that can be hidden, a playroom where the TV is in the basement, most of his books in his room. We keep our room as ours, aside from newborn, our son has been in his own room since about 3 or 4 months old and we prefer it that way.
We plan on having a rnp in the living room, and a vibrating chait in the basement with the bassinet in our room. It takes a lot of effort on my part to keep up with the picking up of our space, but we have settled into a routine and our layout helps things feel spacious. If anything I have learned to not have a million toys that sit around and instead we rotate them and get outside more and go places.
BFP: February 2016 EDD: October 17, 2016
I would research the weight and length limits. My full size crib goes to 50 pounds and my son is 30 pounds at almost 2. You might end up having to transition into a toddler bed sooner. Pack and plays are a cheeper option to save on floor space from my research a few years ago.
BFP: February 2016 EDD: October 17, 2016
BFP: February 2016 EDD: October 17, 2016
@coffee89 I second checking out apartmenttherapy.com, I love that site and am always finding new tips and ideas for our house!
My primary concern is the changing table. Was planning on using the top of the washing machine but it's too short for a changing pad. I could use the bed but I'm terrified there is going to be a poop blowout and it will get on my mattress! Does anyone have experience here?
DS#2 due 25 April 2019
I hadn't intentionally planned on co sleeping but after an emergency c section getting out of bed was super difficult so we didn't end up needing a basinette at all, since she went straight to be crib when she wS 6 months old. Cribs with drawers underneath are great for all the extra blankets and bedding and those big ziplock bags you vacuum the air out of work awesome for getting the outgrown stuff into a small space.
Noise can be an issue during naps, so I'd recommend a nice white noise machine- we use marpac dohm.
New babies come with so much crap- we kept a swing, high chair, and exersaucer in the (tiny) living room. And the hospital rental pump. I found it best to just accept that things would be cramped for a year.
Tell relatives you don't want toy gifts. They really add up.
O16 April Siggy
I second the toy gift thing. The white noise machine is really great. As long as the noise level is consistent in the home it shouldn't affect things too much. My mom would always start whispering if DD was sleeping and I kept having to remind her that it was OK to speak normally. I prefer to keep the house busy and noisy during nap time. We did the quiet thing with my first and it was like I couldn't do anything while she slept.
O16 April Siggy
BFP: February 2016 EDD: October 17, 2016
I agree with noise being good but it doesn't have to be constant oceans, just constant volume. We talked, had the TV on, cleaned etc just like normal from the start. He slept fine so long as it wasn't crazy loud and was/is a mostly great sleeper. I have friends who ran noise machines and didn't make a peep and now their 4 and 5 years old's can't sleep without a noise machine or sleep at friends houses because someone might flush the toilet. I'm team noise.
BFP: February 2016 EDD: October 17, 2016
O16 April Siggy
O16 April Siggy
DS#2 due 25 April 2019