Overview
Description
Specifications
Delivery & Returns
FAQs
Knowledge Hub
Concrete Softened, Glazed, Ridged.
A 400 mm square side table at 450 mm tall, cast in glass fibre reinforced concrete with a cream glazed finish and a bold vertical ridge pattern on all four sides. The GFRC construction gives the table the visual weight and cool tactile density of poured concrete at a manageable 22.5 kg rather than the 40 kg a solid block would demand. The cream glaze transforms the raw industrial character into something warm, sealed and suitable for a bedroom, a living room or a hallway. The ridges are moulded during casting and run from top to bottom in regular columns, catching side light and casting fine shadow lines that shift and deepen as the room changes through the day. The sectioned top provides a stable, flat surface for a lamp, a drink or a phone. No assembly required. The table arrives as a single finished piece ready to place.
What Ridged Concrete Changes.
- It introduces a material nobody expects: Concrete beside a sofa or a bed is unexpected. The cream glaze makes it inviting rather than industrial, but the weight, the coolness and the mineral quality still register as something different from wood, glass or metal.
- The ridges interact with light all day: In morning side light the columns cast deep shadows. Under a lamp at night the ridges glow and the grooves darken. The table changes character continuously without moving.
- It grounds soft, textile-heavy rooms: In a room full of linen, wool, cushions and curtains, a concrete table provides a raw, mineral counterpoint that anchors the softness with something solid and permanent.
- The cream glaze keeps the room warm: Raw concrete is cold and grey. The cream finish introduces a warmth that works alongside oak, walnut, brass, warm whites and natural textiles without the utilitarian edge.
- 400 mm square fits anywhere: Beside a sofa, next to a bed, in a hallway, in a bathroom. The compact footprint works in spaces where a wider table would block movement or crowd the arrangement.
- 22.5 kg stays exactly where you put it: The weight means the table does not shift when you lean on it, does not slide on a rug and does not need repositioning once the room is settled.
- Nothing to build, nothing to attach: The table arrives as a single finished piece. Unbox and place. No legs, no fixings, no instructions, no assembly time whatsoever.
Rooms That Welcome Raw Material.
Beside a deep linen sofa on pale oak flooring where the ridged cream concrete introduces a mineral contrast. In a bedroom next to a low bed with white bedding where the concrete grounds the softness of the textiles. In a hallway beside a mirror where the compact footprint fits a narrow space and the texture gives the entry a sculptural detail. For ideas on how raw and natural materials create calm, textured bedroom interiors, our guide to relaxing navy blue bedroom ideas covers palettes where concrete, linen and deep colour work together.
Concrete That Belongs Indoors.
Concrete is the material people associate with pavements, car parks and multi-storey structures. It is grey, it is heavy, it is functional and it is the last thing most people would consider putting beside a sofa or next to a bed. This table takes that assumption and overturns it completely. The body is glass fibre reinforced concrete, which means the material has the visual density and the cool tactile weight of poured concrete but with the glass fibre reinforcement reducing the mass to a manageable 22.5 kg. The surface is finished in a cream glaze that softens the industrial character of the concrete beneath and introduces a warmth that raw concrete does not have. The vertical ridge pattern running down the sides adds a sculptural texture that catches the light at different angles, casting fine shadow lines across the surface that shift and deepen as the light in the room changes through the day.
At 400 mm square and 450 mm tall, this is a side table that sits at the perfect height beside a sofa arm or next to a bed. The sectioned top provides a flat, stable surface for a lamp, a drink, a phone, a book or whatever the moment demands. The proportions are compact enough to fit a narrow gap between a sofa and a wall, or a tight corner beside an armchair, without dominating the space or blocking movement through the room. But the ridge pattern and the cream glaze give the table a visual presence that its modest footprint does not suggest. It looks larger and more significant than 400 mm because the texture draws the eye and the glaze holds the light.
For a table lamp with a complementary textured finish that sits on the sectioned top and extends the material language upward, the terrazzo table lamp in white pairs the speckled stone composite with the ridged concrete beneath, creating a layered surface arrangement where both pieces share a raw, mineral quality softened by pale finishes.
What Reinforced Concrete Offers a Room.
- Glass fibre reinforced concrete construction. GFRC combines the visual density and cool tactile presence of concrete with glass fibre reinforcement that reduces weight and increases structural resilience. The result is a table that looks and feels like solid stone but weighs 22.5 kg rather than the 40 kg or more that a solid concrete block of this size would demand.
- Cream glazed finish. The glaze transforms the raw concrete from industrial grey to a warm, soft cream that works in bedrooms, living rooms and hallways without introducing the cold, utilitarian quality that exposed concrete carries. The finish is smooth to the touch and sealed against everyday spills and moisture.
- Vertical ridge pattern on all sides. The ridges are moulded into the concrete during casting rather than applied afterward. They run from top to bottom in regular columns, catching side light and casting fine shadow lines that give the table a three-dimensional texture visible from across the room.
- Sectioned top for stable surface placement. The top is divided into sections that create a subtle grid pattern on the surface. The flat centre provides a stable platform for a lamp, a glass or a candle, while the sectioned edges add visual detail when the surface is unoccupied.
- 400 mm square at 450 mm tall. Compact enough for a tight gap beside a sofa, a narrow bedside position or a hallway console arrangement. The 450 mm height sits level with a standard sofa arm or slightly above a mattress top, making it a natural reach for whatever needs to be within arm's length.
- No assembly required. The table arrives as a single finished piece. Remove from the packaging and place directly in the room. There are no legs to attach, no fixings to secure and no build time to factor in.
Why Texture Outperforms Flat Surfaces.
A flat-sided table is a box. It holds a lamp. It occupies a position. It does nothing else visually and contributes nothing to the room beyond the object it supports. A ridged surface changes that equation entirely. The vertical columns create a pattern that interacts with the light in the room rather than simply reflecting it. In the morning when daylight enters from the side, every ridge casts a fine shadow and the table appears deeply textured. In the evening under a lamp sitting on its own top, the light falls downward and the ridges glow with a soft, even warmth while the grooves between them darken. The texture means the table looks different at different times of day, from different positions in the room, and under different lighting conditions. It is the reason ridged and fluted surfaces are one of the most requested details in contemporary interior design: they add visual complexity without adding clutter.
Where Cream Concrete Sits Best.
Beside a deep linen sofa on pale oak flooring, where the cream glaze picks up the warmth of the timber and the ridged texture introduces a mineral contrast against the soft textiles around it. In a bedroom next to a low platform bed with white bedding and a warm wool throw, where the concrete brings a raw, grounding quality that wooden bedside tables lack and the cream finish keeps the room feeling light rather than industrial. In a hallway beside a console table or beneath a mirror, where the compact 400 mm footprint fits a narrow space and the ridge pattern gives guests something textural to notice on the way in. In a bathroom or dressing area where the moisture resistance of glazed concrete makes it practical and the sculptural form elevates it beyond a simple shelf. Cream GFRC works alongside linen, wool, oak, walnut, brass, warm whites and soft greys without looking out of place or introducing a jarring industrial note.
A Few Things Worth Knowing.
- No assembly required. The table arrives as a single finished piece of glazed GFRC. Remove from the packaging and place directly. No legs, no fixings, no tools, no build time.
- 22.5 kg is manageable but noticeable. One person can carry and position the table, but the weight is significant enough that you will feel it. Place carefully rather than dropping, and use felt pads beneath if positioning on a wooden or tiled floor to avoid marking the surface.
- The cream glaze protects the concrete. The glazed finish seals the surface against everyday spills and moisture. Wipe clean with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners that could dull the glaze over time. Use coasters for very hot items as a precaution.
Delivery
| Service | Timescale | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3-5 working days | Free |
| Next working day | Order before 4pm | £5.95 |
UK mainland only. Orders placed on weekends or bank holidays are dispatched the next working day.
We are unable to deliver to Northern Ireland, the Scottish Isles, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man, or the Isles of Scilly. Full delivery information.
Returns
28-day returns policy. Contact us within 28 days of receipt if you are not happy with your order.
Items must be returned unused and in their original packaging. Our UK-based team will guide you through the process. Full returns information.
FAQs: Cream Ridged Concrete Side Table.
The table is 400 mm wide, 400 mm deep and 450 mm tall. The compact square footprint fits beside a sofa, next to a bed, in a narrow hallway or in a corner without blocking movement or crowding the surrounding furniture. The 450 mm height sits level with a standard sofa arm and slightly above most mattress tops.
GFRC is concrete that has been reinforced with glass fibres during the mixing process. The fibres increase structural strength and reduce the overall weight compared to solid concrete of the same size. This table weighs 22.5 kg rather than the 40 kg or more that a solid concrete block at these dimensions would weigh. The material retains the visual density, the cool tactile quality and the permanence of concrete with less than half the mass.
The ridges run vertically from top to bottom on all four sides in regular columns moulded into the concrete during casting. In direct side light every ridge casts a fine shadow and the table appears deeply three-dimensional and sculptural. In softer or overhead light the shadows recede and the surface appears smoother. The texture means the table looks different at different times of day and from different positions in the room.
Living rooms with deep linen sofas and pale timber flooring where the concrete provides a mineral contrast against soft textiles. Bedrooms with low platform beds and white bedding where the weight and texture ground the arrangement. Hallways where the compact footprint and sculptural form give a narrow space visual interest. Japandi, contemporary minimalist and textural interiors where raw materials in refined finishes are central to the palette. For ideas on building bedrooms around bold texture and considered colour, our boho bedroom design guide covers how raw materials and warm finishes work together.
The cream glaze is applied to the concrete surface and sealed, providing protection against everyday spills, moisture and light wear. Wipe clean with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners that could dull the glaze over time. The finish is designed for interior domestic use and handles the daily demands of a living room or bedroom side table without degrading.
Concrete retains a natural coolness similar to stone or marble. The cream glaze does not change the temperature of the material beneath. In a warm room the surface will feel noticeably cool under the hand, which many people find pleasant. It is one of the tactile qualities that distinguishes concrete from wood or upholstered surfaces.
The table weighs 22.5 kg. One person can carry and position it, but the weight is noticeable. Lift rather than drag to avoid marking floors. Use felt pads beneath if placing on wooden, tiled or laminate flooring. Once positioned, the weight is a benefit: the table does not shift, slide or wobble.
None. The table arrives as a single finished piece of glazed GFRC. Remove from the packaging and place directly in the room. There are no legs, no fixings, no tools and no build time involved. It is ready to use the moment it is unpacked.
At 22.5 kg the weight can mark soft flooring if the table is dragged rather than lifted. Place felt pads beneath the base to protect wooden, tiled or laminate floors. On carpet or a rug the weight distributes naturally and marking is not a concern.
Dimensions: 400 mm (W) x 400 mm (D) x 450 mm (H). Material: glass fibre reinforced concrete. Finish: cream glaze. Surface: vertical ridge pattern on all sides, sectioned top. Weight: 22.5 kg. Assembly: none required. Shape: square.
Spaces That Reward Texture and Weight.
A concrete side table introduces a material quality that wood and metal cannot replicate. The weight, the coolness, the ridge pattern and the cream glaze all contribute to a room that feels grounded and considered. These two guides cover how to build interiors where raw materials and warm finishes create spaces with character.
Overview
Concrete Softened, Glazed, Ridged.
A 400 mm square side table at 450 mm tall, cast in glass fibre reinforced concrete with a cream glazed finish and a bold vertical ridge pattern on all four sides. The GFRC construction gives the table the visual weight and cool tactile density of poured concrete at a manageable 22.5 kg rather than the 40 kg a solid block would demand. The cream glaze transforms the raw industrial character into something warm, sealed and suitable for a bedroom, a living room or a hallway. The ridges are moulded during casting and run from top to bottom in regular columns, catching side light and casting fine shadow lines that shift and deepen as the room changes through the day. The sectioned top provides a stable, flat surface for a lamp, a drink or a phone. No assembly required. The table arrives as a single finished piece ready to place.
What Ridged Concrete Changes.
- It introduces a material nobody expects: Concrete beside a sofa or a bed is unexpected. The cream glaze makes it inviting rather than industrial, but the weight, the coolness and the mineral quality still register as something different from wood, glass or metal.
- The ridges interact with light all day: In morning side light the columns cast deep shadows. Under a lamp at night the ridges glow and the grooves darken. The table changes character continuously without moving.
- It grounds soft, textile-heavy rooms: In a room full of linen, wool, cushions and curtains, a concrete table provides a raw, mineral counterpoint that anchors the softness with something solid and permanent.
- The cream glaze keeps the room warm: Raw concrete is cold and grey. The cream finish introduces a warmth that works alongside oak, walnut, brass, warm whites and natural textiles without the utilitarian edge.
- 400 mm square fits anywhere: Beside a sofa, next to a bed, in a hallway, in a bathroom. The compact footprint works in spaces where a wider table would block movement or crowd the arrangement.
- 22.5 kg stays exactly where you put it: The weight means the table does not shift when you lean on it, does not slide on a rug and does not need repositioning once the room is settled.
- Nothing to build, nothing to attach: The table arrives as a single finished piece. Unbox and place. No legs, no fixings, no instructions, no assembly time whatsoever.
Rooms That Welcome Raw Material.
Beside a deep linen sofa on pale oak flooring where the ridged cream concrete introduces a mineral contrast. In a bedroom next to a low bed with white bedding where the concrete grounds the softness of the textiles. In a hallway beside a mirror where the compact footprint fits a narrow space and the texture gives the entry a sculptural detail. For ideas on how raw and natural materials create calm, textured bedroom interiors, our guide to relaxing navy blue bedroom ideas covers palettes where concrete, linen and deep colour work together.
Description
Concrete That Belongs Indoors.
Concrete is the material people associate with pavements, car parks and multi-storey structures. It is grey, it is heavy, it is functional and it is the last thing most people would consider putting beside a sofa or next to a bed. This table takes that assumption and overturns it completely. The body is glass fibre reinforced concrete, which means the material has the visual density and the cool tactile weight of poured concrete but with the glass fibre reinforcement reducing the mass to a manageable 22.5 kg. The surface is finished in a cream glaze that softens the industrial character of the concrete beneath and introduces a warmth that raw concrete does not have. The vertical ridge pattern running down the sides adds a sculptural texture that catches the light at different angles, casting fine shadow lines across the surface that shift and deepen as the light in the room changes through the day.
At 400 mm square and 450 mm tall, this is a side table that sits at the perfect height beside a sofa arm or next to a bed. The sectioned top provides a flat, stable surface for a lamp, a drink, a phone, a book or whatever the moment demands. The proportions are compact enough to fit a narrow gap between a sofa and a wall, or a tight corner beside an armchair, without dominating the space or blocking movement through the room. But the ridge pattern and the cream glaze give the table a visual presence that its modest footprint does not suggest. It looks larger and more significant than 400 mm because the texture draws the eye and the glaze holds the light.
For a table lamp with a complementary textured finish that sits on the sectioned top and extends the material language upward, the terrazzo table lamp in white pairs the speckled stone composite with the ridged concrete beneath, creating a layered surface arrangement where both pieces share a raw, mineral quality softened by pale finishes.
What Reinforced Concrete Offers a Room.
- Glass fibre reinforced concrete construction. GFRC combines the visual density and cool tactile presence of concrete with glass fibre reinforcement that reduces weight and increases structural resilience. The result is a table that looks and feels like solid stone but weighs 22.5 kg rather than the 40 kg or more that a solid concrete block of this size would demand.
- Cream glazed finish. The glaze transforms the raw concrete from industrial grey to a warm, soft cream that works in bedrooms, living rooms and hallways without introducing the cold, utilitarian quality that exposed concrete carries. The finish is smooth to the touch and sealed against everyday spills and moisture.
- Vertical ridge pattern on all sides. The ridges are moulded into the concrete during casting rather than applied afterward. They run from top to bottom in regular columns, catching side light and casting fine shadow lines that give the table a three-dimensional texture visible from across the room.
- Sectioned top for stable surface placement. The top is divided into sections that create a subtle grid pattern on the surface. The flat centre provides a stable platform for a lamp, a glass or a candle, while the sectioned edges add visual detail when the surface is unoccupied.
- 400 mm square at 450 mm tall. Compact enough for a tight gap beside a sofa, a narrow bedside position or a hallway console arrangement. The 450 mm height sits level with a standard sofa arm or slightly above a mattress top, making it a natural reach for whatever needs to be within arm's length.
- No assembly required. The table arrives as a single finished piece. Remove from the packaging and place directly in the room. There are no legs to attach, no fixings to secure and no build time to factor in.
Why Texture Outperforms Flat Surfaces.
A flat-sided table is a box. It holds a lamp. It occupies a position. It does nothing else visually and contributes nothing to the room beyond the object it supports. A ridged surface changes that equation entirely. The vertical columns create a pattern that interacts with the light in the room rather than simply reflecting it. In the morning when daylight enters from the side, every ridge casts a fine shadow and the table appears deeply textured. In the evening under a lamp sitting on its own top, the light falls downward and the ridges glow with a soft, even warmth while the grooves between them darken. The texture means the table looks different at different times of day, from different positions in the room, and under different lighting conditions. It is the reason ridged and fluted surfaces are one of the most requested details in contemporary interior design: they add visual complexity without adding clutter.
Where Cream Concrete Sits Best.
Beside a deep linen sofa on pale oak flooring, where the cream glaze picks up the warmth of the timber and the ridged texture introduces a mineral contrast against the soft textiles around it. In a bedroom next to a low platform bed with white bedding and a warm wool throw, where the concrete brings a raw, grounding quality that wooden bedside tables lack and the cream finish keeps the room feeling light rather than industrial. In a hallway beside a console table or beneath a mirror, where the compact 400 mm footprint fits a narrow space and the ridge pattern gives guests something textural to notice on the way in. In a bathroom or dressing area where the moisture resistance of glazed concrete makes it practical and the sculptural form elevates it beyond a simple shelf. Cream GFRC works alongside linen, wool, oak, walnut, brass, warm whites and soft greys without looking out of place or introducing a jarring industrial note.
A Few Things Worth Knowing.
- No assembly required. The table arrives as a single finished piece of glazed GFRC. Remove from the packaging and place directly. No legs, no fixings, no tools, no build time.
- 22.5 kg is manageable but noticeable. One person can carry and position the table, but the weight is significant enough that you will feel it. Place carefully rather than dropping, and use felt pads beneath if positioning on a wooden or tiled floor to avoid marking the surface.
- The cream glaze protects the concrete. The glazed finish seals the surface against everyday spills and moisture. Wipe clean with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners that could dull the glaze over time. Use coasters for very hot items as a precaution.
Specifications
Delivery & Returns
Delivery
| Service | Timescale | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3-5 working days | Free |
| Next working day | Order before 4pm | £5.95 |
UK mainland only. Orders placed on weekends or bank holidays are dispatched the next working day.
We are unable to deliver to Northern Ireland, the Scottish Isles, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man, or the Isles of Scilly. Full delivery information.
Returns
28-day returns policy. Contact us within 28 days of receipt if you are not happy with your order.
Items must be returned unused and in their original packaging. Our UK-based team will guide you through the process. Full returns information.
FAQs
FAQs: Cream Ridged Concrete Side Table.
The table is 400 mm wide, 400 mm deep and 450 mm tall. The compact square footprint fits beside a sofa, next to a bed, in a narrow hallway or in a corner without blocking movement or crowding the surrounding furniture. The 450 mm height sits level with a standard sofa arm and slightly above most mattress tops.
GFRC is concrete that has been reinforced with glass fibres during the mixing process. The fibres increase structural strength and reduce the overall weight compared to solid concrete of the same size. This table weighs 22.5 kg rather than the 40 kg or more that a solid concrete block at these dimensions would weigh. The material retains the visual density, the cool tactile quality and the permanence of concrete with less than half the mass.
The ridges run vertically from top to bottom on all four sides in regular columns moulded into the concrete during casting. In direct side light every ridge casts a fine shadow and the table appears deeply three-dimensional and sculptural. In softer or overhead light the shadows recede and the surface appears smoother. The texture means the table looks different at different times of day and from different positions in the room.
Living rooms with deep linen sofas and pale timber flooring where the concrete provides a mineral contrast against soft textiles. Bedrooms with low platform beds and white bedding where the weight and texture ground the arrangement. Hallways where the compact footprint and sculptural form give a narrow space visual interest. Japandi, contemporary minimalist and textural interiors where raw materials in refined finishes are central to the palette. For ideas on building bedrooms around bold texture and considered colour, our boho bedroom design guide covers how raw materials and warm finishes work together.
The cream glaze is applied to the concrete surface and sealed, providing protection against everyday spills, moisture and light wear. Wipe clean with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners that could dull the glaze over time. The finish is designed for interior domestic use and handles the daily demands of a living room or bedroom side table without degrading.
Concrete retains a natural coolness similar to stone or marble. The cream glaze does not change the temperature of the material beneath. In a warm room the surface will feel noticeably cool under the hand, which many people find pleasant. It is one of the tactile qualities that distinguishes concrete from wood or upholstered surfaces.
The table weighs 22.5 kg. One person can carry and position it, but the weight is noticeable. Lift rather than drag to avoid marking floors. Use felt pads beneath if placing on wooden, tiled or laminate flooring. Once positioned, the weight is a benefit: the table does not shift, slide or wobble.
None. The table arrives as a single finished piece of glazed GFRC. Remove from the packaging and place directly in the room. There are no legs, no fixings, no tools and no build time involved. It is ready to use the moment it is unpacked.
At 22.5 kg the weight can mark soft flooring if the table is dragged rather than lifted. Place felt pads beneath the base to protect wooden, tiled or laminate floors. On carpet or a rug the weight distributes naturally and marking is not a concern.
Dimensions: 400 mm (W) x 400 mm (D) x 450 mm (H). Material: glass fibre reinforced concrete. Finish: cream glaze. Surface: vertical ridge pattern on all sides, sectioned top. Weight: 22.5 kg. Assembly: none required. Shape: square.
Knowledge Hub
Spaces That Reward Texture and Weight.
A concrete side table introduces a material quality that wood and metal cannot replicate. The weight, the coolness, the ridge pattern and the cream glaze all contribute to a room that feels grounded and considered. These two guides cover how to build interiors where raw materials and warm finishes create spaces with character.
Cream Glass Fibre Reinforced Concrete Ridged Side Table
Overview
Description
Specifications
Delivery & Returns
FAQs
Knowledge Hub
Concrete Softened, Glazed, Ridged.
A 400 mm square side table at 450 mm tall, cast in glass fibre reinforced concrete with a cream glazed finish and a bold vertical ridge pattern on all four sides. The GFRC construction gives the table the visual weight and cool tactile density of poured concrete at a manageable 22.5 kg rather than the 40 kg a solid block would demand. The cream glaze transforms the raw industrial character into something warm, sealed and suitable for a bedroom, a living room or a hallway. The ridges are moulded during casting and run from top to bottom in regular columns, catching side light and casting fine shadow lines that shift and deepen as the room changes through the day. The sectioned top provides a stable, flat surface for a lamp, a drink or a phone. No assembly required. The table arrives as a single finished piece ready to place.
What Ridged Concrete Changes.
- It introduces a material nobody expects: Concrete beside a sofa or a bed is unexpected. The cream glaze makes it inviting rather than industrial, but the weight, the coolness and the mineral quality still register as something different from wood, glass or metal.
- The ridges interact with light all day: In morning side light the columns cast deep shadows. Under a lamp at night the ridges glow and the grooves darken. The table changes character continuously without moving.
- It grounds soft, textile-heavy rooms: In a room full of linen, wool, cushions and curtains, a concrete table provides a raw, mineral counterpoint that anchors the softness with something solid and permanent.
- The cream glaze keeps the room warm: Raw concrete is cold and grey. The cream finish introduces a warmth that works alongside oak, walnut, brass, warm whites and natural textiles without the utilitarian edge.
- 400 mm square fits anywhere: Beside a sofa, next to a bed, in a hallway, in a bathroom. The compact footprint works in spaces where a wider table would block movement or crowd the arrangement.
- 22.5 kg stays exactly where you put it: The weight means the table does not shift when you lean on it, does not slide on a rug and does not need repositioning once the room is settled.
- Nothing to build, nothing to attach: The table arrives as a single finished piece. Unbox and place. No legs, no fixings, no instructions, no assembly time whatsoever.
Rooms That Welcome Raw Material.
Beside a deep linen sofa on pale oak flooring where the ridged cream concrete introduces a mineral contrast. In a bedroom next to a low bed with white bedding where the concrete grounds the softness of the textiles. In a hallway beside a mirror where the compact footprint fits a narrow space and the texture gives the entry a sculptural detail. For ideas on how raw and natural materials create calm, textured bedroom interiors, our guide to relaxing navy blue bedroom ideas covers palettes where concrete, linen and deep colour work together.
Concrete That Belongs Indoors.
Concrete is the material people associate with pavements, car parks and multi-storey structures. It is grey, it is heavy, it is functional and it is the last thing most people would consider putting beside a sofa or next to a bed. This table takes that assumption and overturns it completely. The body is glass fibre reinforced concrete, which means the material has the visual density and the cool tactile weight of poured concrete but with the glass fibre reinforcement reducing the mass to a manageable 22.5 kg. The surface is finished in a cream glaze that softens the industrial character of the concrete beneath and introduces a warmth that raw concrete does not have. The vertical ridge pattern running down the sides adds a sculptural texture that catches the light at different angles, casting fine shadow lines across the surface that shift and deepen as the light in the room changes through the day.
At 400 mm square and 450 mm tall, this is a side table that sits at the perfect height beside a sofa arm or next to a bed. The sectioned top provides a flat, stable surface for a lamp, a drink, a phone, a book or whatever the moment demands. The proportions are compact enough to fit a narrow gap between a sofa and a wall, or a tight corner beside an armchair, without dominating the space or blocking movement through the room. But the ridge pattern and the cream glaze give the table a visual presence that its modest footprint does not suggest. It looks larger and more significant than 400 mm because the texture draws the eye and the glaze holds the light.
For a table lamp with a complementary textured finish that sits on the sectioned top and extends the material language upward, the terrazzo table lamp in white pairs the speckled stone composite with the ridged concrete beneath, creating a layered surface arrangement where both pieces share a raw, mineral quality softened by pale finishes.
What Reinforced Concrete Offers a Room.
- Glass fibre reinforced concrete construction. GFRC combines the visual density and cool tactile presence of concrete with glass fibre reinforcement that reduces weight and increases structural resilience. The result is a table that looks and feels like solid stone but weighs 22.5 kg rather than the 40 kg or more that a solid concrete block of this size would demand.
- Cream glazed finish. The glaze transforms the raw concrete from industrial grey to a warm, soft cream that works in bedrooms, living rooms and hallways without introducing the cold, utilitarian quality that exposed concrete carries. The finish is smooth to the touch and sealed against everyday spills and moisture.
- Vertical ridge pattern on all sides. The ridges are moulded into the concrete during casting rather than applied afterward. They run from top to bottom in regular columns, catching side light and casting fine shadow lines that give the table a three-dimensional texture visible from across the room.
- Sectioned top for stable surface placement. The top is divided into sections that create a subtle grid pattern on the surface. The flat centre provides a stable platform for a lamp, a glass or a candle, while the sectioned edges add visual detail when the surface is unoccupied.
- 400 mm square at 450 mm tall. Compact enough for a tight gap beside a sofa, a narrow bedside position or a hallway console arrangement. The 450 mm height sits level with a standard sofa arm or slightly above a mattress top, making it a natural reach for whatever needs to be within arm's length.
- No assembly required. The table arrives as a single finished piece. Remove from the packaging and place directly in the room. There are no legs to attach, no fixings to secure and no build time to factor in.
Why Texture Outperforms Flat Surfaces.
A flat-sided table is a box. It holds a lamp. It occupies a position. It does nothing else visually and contributes nothing to the room beyond the object it supports. A ridged surface changes that equation entirely. The vertical columns create a pattern that interacts with the light in the room rather than simply reflecting it. In the morning when daylight enters from the side, every ridge casts a fine shadow and the table appears deeply textured. In the evening under a lamp sitting on its own top, the light falls downward and the ridges glow with a soft, even warmth while the grooves between them darken. The texture means the table looks different at different times of day, from different positions in the room, and under different lighting conditions. It is the reason ridged and fluted surfaces are one of the most requested details in contemporary interior design: they add visual complexity without adding clutter.
Where Cream Concrete Sits Best.
Beside a deep linen sofa on pale oak flooring, where the cream glaze picks up the warmth of the timber and the ridged texture introduces a mineral contrast against the soft textiles around it. In a bedroom next to a low platform bed with white bedding and a warm wool throw, where the concrete brings a raw, grounding quality that wooden bedside tables lack and the cream finish keeps the room feeling light rather than industrial. In a hallway beside a console table or beneath a mirror, where the compact 400 mm footprint fits a narrow space and the ridge pattern gives guests something textural to notice on the way in. In a bathroom or dressing area where the moisture resistance of glazed concrete makes it practical and the sculptural form elevates it beyond a simple shelf. Cream GFRC works alongside linen, wool, oak, walnut, brass, warm whites and soft greys without looking out of place or introducing a jarring industrial note.
A Few Things Worth Knowing.
- No assembly required. The table arrives as a single finished piece of glazed GFRC. Remove from the packaging and place directly. No legs, no fixings, no tools, no build time.
- 22.5 kg is manageable but noticeable. One person can carry and position the table, but the weight is significant enough that you will feel it. Place carefully rather than dropping, and use felt pads beneath if positioning on a wooden or tiled floor to avoid marking the surface.
- The cream glaze protects the concrete. The glazed finish seals the surface against everyday spills and moisture. Wipe clean with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners that could dull the glaze over time. Use coasters for very hot items as a precaution.
Delivery
| Service | Timescale | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3-5 working days | Free |
| Next working day | Order before 4pm | £5.95 |
UK mainland only. Orders placed on weekends or bank holidays are dispatched the next working day.
We are unable to deliver to Northern Ireland, the Scottish Isles, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man, or the Isles of Scilly. Full delivery information.
Returns
28-day returns policy. Contact us within 28 days of receipt if you are not happy with your order.
Items must be returned unused and in their original packaging. Our UK-based team will guide you through the process. Full returns information.
FAQs: Cream Ridged Concrete Side Table.
The table is 400 mm wide, 400 mm deep and 450 mm tall. The compact square footprint fits beside a sofa, next to a bed, in a narrow hallway or in a corner without blocking movement or crowding the surrounding furniture. The 450 mm height sits level with a standard sofa arm and slightly above most mattress tops.
GFRC is concrete that has been reinforced with glass fibres during the mixing process. The fibres increase structural strength and reduce the overall weight compared to solid concrete of the same size. This table weighs 22.5 kg rather than the 40 kg or more that a solid concrete block at these dimensions would weigh. The material retains the visual density, the cool tactile quality and the permanence of concrete with less than half the mass.
The ridges run vertically from top to bottom on all four sides in regular columns moulded into the concrete during casting. In direct side light every ridge casts a fine shadow and the table appears deeply three-dimensional and sculptural. In softer or overhead light the shadows recede and the surface appears smoother. The texture means the table looks different at different times of day and from different positions in the room.
Living rooms with deep linen sofas and pale timber flooring where the concrete provides a mineral contrast against soft textiles. Bedrooms with low platform beds and white bedding where the weight and texture ground the arrangement. Hallways where the compact footprint and sculptural form give a narrow space visual interest. Japandi, contemporary minimalist and textural interiors where raw materials in refined finishes are central to the palette. For ideas on building bedrooms around bold texture and considered colour, our boho bedroom design guide covers how raw materials and warm finishes work together.
The cream glaze is applied to the concrete surface and sealed, providing protection against everyday spills, moisture and light wear. Wipe clean with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners that could dull the glaze over time. The finish is designed for interior domestic use and handles the daily demands of a living room or bedroom side table without degrading.
Concrete retains a natural coolness similar to stone or marble. The cream glaze does not change the temperature of the material beneath. In a warm room the surface will feel noticeably cool under the hand, which many people find pleasant. It is one of the tactile qualities that distinguishes concrete from wood or upholstered surfaces.
The table weighs 22.5 kg. One person can carry and position it, but the weight is noticeable. Lift rather than drag to avoid marking floors. Use felt pads beneath if placing on wooden, tiled or laminate flooring. Once positioned, the weight is a benefit: the table does not shift, slide or wobble.
None. The table arrives as a single finished piece of glazed GFRC. Remove from the packaging and place directly in the room. There are no legs, no fixings, no tools and no build time involved. It is ready to use the moment it is unpacked.
At 22.5 kg the weight can mark soft flooring if the table is dragged rather than lifted. Place felt pads beneath the base to protect wooden, tiled or laminate floors. On carpet or a rug the weight distributes naturally and marking is not a concern.
Dimensions: 400 mm (W) x 400 mm (D) x 450 mm (H). Material: glass fibre reinforced concrete. Finish: cream glaze. Surface: vertical ridge pattern on all sides, sectioned top. Weight: 22.5 kg. Assembly: none required. Shape: square.
Spaces That Reward Texture and Weight.
A concrete side table introduces a material quality that wood and metal cannot replicate. The weight, the coolness, the ridge pattern and the cream glaze all contribute to a room that feels grounded and considered. These two guides cover how to build interiors where raw materials and warm finishes create spaces with character.
Overview
Concrete Softened, Glazed, Ridged.
A 400 mm square side table at 450 mm tall, cast in glass fibre reinforced concrete with a cream glazed finish and a bold vertical ridge pattern on all four sides. The GFRC construction gives the table the visual weight and cool tactile density of poured concrete at a manageable 22.5 kg rather than the 40 kg a solid block would demand. The cream glaze transforms the raw industrial character into something warm, sealed and suitable for a bedroom, a living room or a hallway. The ridges are moulded during casting and run from top to bottom in regular columns, catching side light and casting fine shadow lines that shift and deepen as the room changes through the day. The sectioned top provides a stable, flat surface for a lamp, a drink or a phone. No assembly required. The table arrives as a single finished piece ready to place.
What Ridged Concrete Changes.
- It introduces a material nobody expects: Concrete beside a sofa or a bed is unexpected. The cream glaze makes it inviting rather than industrial, but the weight, the coolness and the mineral quality still register as something different from wood, glass or metal.
- The ridges interact with light all day: In morning side light the columns cast deep shadows. Under a lamp at night the ridges glow and the grooves darken. The table changes character continuously without moving.
- It grounds soft, textile-heavy rooms: In a room full of linen, wool, cushions and curtains, a concrete table provides a raw, mineral counterpoint that anchors the softness with something solid and permanent.
- The cream glaze keeps the room warm: Raw concrete is cold and grey. The cream finish introduces a warmth that works alongside oak, walnut, brass, warm whites and natural textiles without the utilitarian edge.
- 400 mm square fits anywhere: Beside a sofa, next to a bed, in a hallway, in a bathroom. The compact footprint works in spaces where a wider table would block movement or crowd the arrangement.
- 22.5 kg stays exactly where you put it: The weight means the table does not shift when you lean on it, does not slide on a rug and does not need repositioning once the room is settled.
- Nothing to build, nothing to attach: The table arrives as a single finished piece. Unbox and place. No legs, no fixings, no instructions, no assembly time whatsoever.
Rooms That Welcome Raw Material.
Beside a deep linen sofa on pale oak flooring where the ridged cream concrete introduces a mineral contrast. In a bedroom next to a low bed with white bedding where the concrete grounds the softness of the textiles. In a hallway beside a mirror where the compact footprint fits a narrow space and the texture gives the entry a sculptural detail. For ideas on how raw and natural materials create calm, textured bedroom interiors, our guide to relaxing navy blue bedroom ideas covers palettes where concrete, linen and deep colour work together.
Description
Concrete That Belongs Indoors.
Concrete is the material people associate with pavements, car parks and multi-storey structures. It is grey, it is heavy, it is functional and it is the last thing most people would consider putting beside a sofa or next to a bed. This table takes that assumption and overturns it completely. The body is glass fibre reinforced concrete, which means the material has the visual density and the cool tactile weight of poured concrete but with the glass fibre reinforcement reducing the mass to a manageable 22.5 kg. The surface is finished in a cream glaze that softens the industrial character of the concrete beneath and introduces a warmth that raw concrete does not have. The vertical ridge pattern running down the sides adds a sculptural texture that catches the light at different angles, casting fine shadow lines across the surface that shift and deepen as the light in the room changes through the day.
At 400 mm square and 450 mm tall, this is a side table that sits at the perfect height beside a sofa arm or next to a bed. The sectioned top provides a flat, stable surface for a lamp, a drink, a phone, a book or whatever the moment demands. The proportions are compact enough to fit a narrow gap between a sofa and a wall, or a tight corner beside an armchair, without dominating the space or blocking movement through the room. But the ridge pattern and the cream glaze give the table a visual presence that its modest footprint does not suggest. It looks larger and more significant than 400 mm because the texture draws the eye and the glaze holds the light.
For a table lamp with a complementary textured finish that sits on the sectioned top and extends the material language upward, the terrazzo table lamp in white pairs the speckled stone composite with the ridged concrete beneath, creating a layered surface arrangement where both pieces share a raw, mineral quality softened by pale finishes.
What Reinforced Concrete Offers a Room.
- Glass fibre reinforced concrete construction. GFRC combines the visual density and cool tactile presence of concrete with glass fibre reinforcement that reduces weight and increases structural resilience. The result is a table that looks and feels like solid stone but weighs 22.5 kg rather than the 40 kg or more that a solid concrete block of this size would demand.
- Cream glazed finish. The glaze transforms the raw concrete from industrial grey to a warm, soft cream that works in bedrooms, living rooms and hallways without introducing the cold, utilitarian quality that exposed concrete carries. The finish is smooth to the touch and sealed against everyday spills and moisture.
- Vertical ridge pattern on all sides. The ridges are moulded into the concrete during casting rather than applied afterward. They run from top to bottom in regular columns, catching side light and casting fine shadow lines that give the table a three-dimensional texture visible from across the room.
- Sectioned top for stable surface placement. The top is divided into sections that create a subtle grid pattern on the surface. The flat centre provides a stable platform for a lamp, a glass or a candle, while the sectioned edges add visual detail when the surface is unoccupied.
- 400 mm square at 450 mm tall. Compact enough for a tight gap beside a sofa, a narrow bedside position or a hallway console arrangement. The 450 mm height sits level with a standard sofa arm or slightly above a mattress top, making it a natural reach for whatever needs to be within arm's length.
- No assembly required. The table arrives as a single finished piece. Remove from the packaging and place directly in the room. There are no legs to attach, no fixings to secure and no build time to factor in.
Why Texture Outperforms Flat Surfaces.
A flat-sided table is a box. It holds a lamp. It occupies a position. It does nothing else visually and contributes nothing to the room beyond the object it supports. A ridged surface changes that equation entirely. The vertical columns create a pattern that interacts with the light in the room rather than simply reflecting it. In the morning when daylight enters from the side, every ridge casts a fine shadow and the table appears deeply textured. In the evening under a lamp sitting on its own top, the light falls downward and the ridges glow with a soft, even warmth while the grooves between them darken. The texture means the table looks different at different times of day, from different positions in the room, and under different lighting conditions. It is the reason ridged and fluted surfaces are one of the most requested details in contemporary interior design: they add visual complexity without adding clutter.
Where Cream Concrete Sits Best.
Beside a deep linen sofa on pale oak flooring, where the cream glaze picks up the warmth of the timber and the ridged texture introduces a mineral contrast against the soft textiles around it. In a bedroom next to a low platform bed with white bedding and a warm wool throw, where the concrete brings a raw, grounding quality that wooden bedside tables lack and the cream finish keeps the room feeling light rather than industrial. In a hallway beside a console table or beneath a mirror, where the compact 400 mm footprint fits a narrow space and the ridge pattern gives guests something textural to notice on the way in. In a bathroom or dressing area where the moisture resistance of glazed concrete makes it practical and the sculptural form elevates it beyond a simple shelf. Cream GFRC works alongside linen, wool, oak, walnut, brass, warm whites and soft greys without looking out of place or introducing a jarring industrial note.
A Few Things Worth Knowing.
- No assembly required. The table arrives as a single finished piece of glazed GFRC. Remove from the packaging and place directly. No legs, no fixings, no tools, no build time.
- 22.5 kg is manageable but noticeable. One person can carry and position the table, but the weight is significant enough that you will feel it. Place carefully rather than dropping, and use felt pads beneath if positioning on a wooden or tiled floor to avoid marking the surface.
- The cream glaze protects the concrete. The glazed finish seals the surface against everyday spills and moisture. Wipe clean with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners that could dull the glaze over time. Use coasters for very hot items as a precaution.
Specifications
Delivery & Returns
Delivery
| Service | Timescale | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 3-5 working days | Free |
| Next working day | Order before 4pm | £5.95 |
UK mainland only. Orders placed on weekends or bank holidays are dispatched the next working day.
We are unable to deliver to Northern Ireland, the Scottish Isles, Jersey, Guernsey, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man, or the Isles of Scilly. Full delivery information.
Returns
28-day returns policy. Contact us within 28 days of receipt if you are not happy with your order.
Items must be returned unused and in their original packaging. Our UK-based team will guide you through the process. Full returns information.
FAQs
FAQs: Cream Ridged Concrete Side Table.
The table is 400 mm wide, 400 mm deep and 450 mm tall. The compact square footprint fits beside a sofa, next to a bed, in a narrow hallway or in a corner without blocking movement or crowding the surrounding furniture. The 450 mm height sits level with a standard sofa arm and slightly above most mattress tops.
GFRC is concrete that has been reinforced with glass fibres during the mixing process. The fibres increase structural strength and reduce the overall weight compared to solid concrete of the same size. This table weighs 22.5 kg rather than the 40 kg or more that a solid concrete block at these dimensions would weigh. The material retains the visual density, the cool tactile quality and the permanence of concrete with less than half the mass.
The ridges run vertically from top to bottom on all four sides in regular columns moulded into the concrete during casting. In direct side light every ridge casts a fine shadow and the table appears deeply three-dimensional and sculptural. In softer or overhead light the shadows recede and the surface appears smoother. The texture means the table looks different at different times of day and from different positions in the room.
Living rooms with deep linen sofas and pale timber flooring where the concrete provides a mineral contrast against soft textiles. Bedrooms with low platform beds and white bedding where the weight and texture ground the arrangement. Hallways where the compact footprint and sculptural form give a narrow space visual interest. Japandi, contemporary minimalist and textural interiors where raw materials in refined finishes are central to the palette. For ideas on building bedrooms around bold texture and considered colour, our boho bedroom design guide covers how raw materials and warm finishes work together.
The cream glaze is applied to the concrete surface and sealed, providing protection against everyday spills, moisture and light wear. Wipe clean with a damp cloth. Avoid abrasive cleaners that could dull the glaze over time. The finish is designed for interior domestic use and handles the daily demands of a living room or bedroom side table without degrading.
Concrete retains a natural coolness similar to stone or marble. The cream glaze does not change the temperature of the material beneath. In a warm room the surface will feel noticeably cool under the hand, which many people find pleasant. It is one of the tactile qualities that distinguishes concrete from wood or upholstered surfaces.
The table weighs 22.5 kg. One person can carry and position it, but the weight is noticeable. Lift rather than drag to avoid marking floors. Use felt pads beneath if placing on wooden, tiled or laminate flooring. Once positioned, the weight is a benefit: the table does not shift, slide or wobble.
None. The table arrives as a single finished piece of glazed GFRC. Remove from the packaging and place directly in the room. There are no legs, no fixings, no tools and no build time involved. It is ready to use the moment it is unpacked.
At 22.5 kg the weight can mark soft flooring if the table is dragged rather than lifted. Place felt pads beneath the base to protect wooden, tiled or laminate floors. On carpet or a rug the weight distributes naturally and marking is not a concern.
Dimensions: 400 mm (W) x 400 mm (D) x 450 mm (H). Material: glass fibre reinforced concrete. Finish: cream glaze. Surface: vertical ridge pattern on all sides, sectioned top. Weight: 22.5 kg. Assembly: none required. Shape: square.
Knowledge Hub
Spaces That Reward Texture and Weight.
A concrete side table introduces a material quality that wood and metal cannot replicate. The weight, the coolness, the ridge pattern and the cream glaze all contribute to a room that feels grounded and considered. These two guides cover how to build interiors where raw materials and warm finishes create spaces with character.