Toddler Bed Advice

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PaxWorks

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My 2 year old son is about to be evicted from his cot to make room for a new tenant later this year and is in need of a new bed. I'm now in the classic position where the better half has found a picture of what she wants online, and I've volunteered to build it for twice the price and to a timescale that I definitely won't meet.

I've tried to reverse engineer a design for the bed in the picture below, but as I have no further detail than the picture itself and being fairly new to woodworking, I was hoping for some advice on materials and design.

Toddler Bed.png


Materials

For materials, I guessed the pictured piece was likely made from oak, but to keep costs down I was planning to build it from European steamed beech. It's readily available from my local hardwood merchant (Surrey Timbers) but I've never actually worked with it and wasn't sure if that would be a suitable choice? I don't have the machinery to mill rough sawn timber yet, so I would be looking at using 32mm PAR for the frame and 20mm dowel rod from a separate supplier for the bars.

Is there any reason not to used Beech? Is there a better alternative that would still be cost effective?

Design

I've thrown together a design in SketchUp to help get an idea of dimensions (largely dictated by standard mattress sizes) and create a cut-list.

1655374467124.png


The only real change I've made is the feet as I thought it would be easier to extend and add a taper to the stile (if that's even the right term?) rather than make separate pieces for the feet.

I would be planning on using mortice and tenon joinery throughout (which will need some serious practice ahead of time) and I think I have a solution for aligning the dowel rods between the upper and lower rails.

My main questions here are:
1. Would there be any concern about the long rails sagging across that distance and do I need to add any support in the middle?
2. Do I need to add an additional 900mm rail across the width in the middle or will the slats (to be made from plywood) give it enough strength?

Any advice / suggestions on design, materials, or joinery methods would be much appreciated. This will be the biggest furniture project I've done to date that wasn't made entirely from sheet goods and certainly more hand cut joinery than I will have done before, so want to make sure I give myself a decent chance of success from the start.
 
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If you want it more decorative then use stair rail spindles, just route a rebate and then assemble as if doing a staircase, easier to get the spacings with the infills. Also there is a requirement as to the spacing of these parts so a kid cannot get their head stuck! Providing you make the slats from the right wood and suitable dimensions then there is no reason why they should sag, many beds have slats that just run from side to side although some do have a support running lengthways with a single support leg in the middle. Don't overspace them either as some mattresses do not like the gaps to big.
 
I just made a bed for my grandson a couple of weeks ago. The bed was designed around an Ikea mattress. I just bought the slats from Ikea. They are curved and fixed together with tape. Made from 9mm ply on 12cm spacing. £20.
 
If it’s that low to the floor, you don’t need the perimeter at all and climbing over things often makes for a more dangerous condition (like stair gates at the top) than not having them. But if you like the look of that, go for it.

The entanglement opportunities all round are a really bad plan for babies, at two you are probably ok, again they’re some of the extra dangerous things sold to increase safety yet tragically cause the opposite effect, a bit like those plastic things for sockets that defeat the safety features already present.

32mm beech is plenty strong enough for your design as would be any other wood really.

I think the guidance on spindle spacing for cots is 60mm, 100mm for everything else (like balustrades).

If time’s against you, you can pick up what was seriously expensive children’s furniture for peanuts secondhand, it loses value in a staggering way.
 
I think the rail is too high - low enough for kiddie to clamber over, high enough to give a bump/shock when they do, and higher than necessary to ensure they do not roll out of bed on to the floor.

Possibly a case of attractive design (all in the eye of the beholder) over function!
 
Have you considered designing the bed so the sides can be removed as the toddler gets older and too old for a 'baby' bed. It's a full length single bed, so could last for years. For my grandson's bed, I just used this to stop him falling out of bed in the middle of the night. He won't need it for long. He is only 4, but already aware of what kind of bed he prefers. He had grown out of the digger bed
Congratulations on the new tenant 😁
 
The separate feet pieces shown in the photo provide a lot of support to the joint which will otherwise just rely on the rail fixing on quite a small section. I agree with others that the barriers seem a bit excessive and will prevent you sitting on the edge of the bed when reading and putting the child to sleep. Bed slats can be bought from IKEA very cheap or got off freecycle even cheaper . If you make some I would just use par pine , the cross plies in ply mean it will be weaker than solid in a thin strip.
 
Have you considered designing the bed so the sides can be removed as the toddler gets older and too old for a 'baby' bed. It's a full length single bed, so could last for years.

I was going to say the same thing. The removal of the sides is a "you're a big boy now" milestone.

But our son went straight from a cot into a full sized bed - we bought a guard like the one that Sandyn showed, and decided to only use it if he started falling out of bed. He never did, so it was a waste of money. TBH, as long as there's no furniture nearby for him to smack his head on if he falls out, he won't come to any harm anyway, and learning not to fall out of bed without there being a fence to restrain you is a necessary skill.
 
But our son went straight from a cot into a full sized bed - we bought a guard like the one that Sandyn showed, and decided to only use it if he started falling out of bed. He never did
Same here, remember an adult has to attend to child and the bedding so leaning over a fixed rail is back-straining as the child gets heavier. I wouldn't invest much money or time in a bed that will be used for a very short time. Standard ideally low-ish bed by a wall so one side is protected. Nothing to get trapped in, tangled round, lift over or fall on.
 
By two our son could climb out of a cot, open "childproof" stair gates as if they were not there (and close them behind him if he felt like it), and climb over a farmyard gate for that matter with no problem at all. I seriously suggest all the bars are a waste of time and money. Put the cash into a good quality mattress.
 
Thanks all for the advice, much appreciated!

Looking at it with fresh eyes I agree on the points about the sides being restrictive and shortening the useful lifespan of the bed. I think it's back to the drawing board on the design and I might consider just removing the sides all together and using something temporary to prevent rolling out of bed in the short term if needed.
 
... I've volunteered to build it for twice the price and to a timescale that I definitely won't meet.

😂 sounds like all of my projects


Buy the mattress first, then size the bed to that.

Bod

I'm also about to make some beds for the kids. I had read you should get the mattress first so had planned to get as much prep done as possible and then just cut to final dimensions when they arrive, but how much variation could be expected from the standard sizes?

Is there any 'standard' for how much bigger than the mattress the base should be?
 
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