Walk into a typical townhouse and the first thing you notice is the staircase. It eats your living room, dictates your furniture layout, and reminds you every single day that you are working with a narrow footprint. I have been there. My first townhouse had a ground floor that measured just four meters wide and nine meters long. That slim rectangle had to serve as kitchen, dining area, and living room all at once. The window was at one end, so light got trapped by the stairs. Every piece of furniture had to earn its square meter. That is where thoughtful townhouse interior design starts, not with paint swatches or throw pillows, but with ruthless editing of what you actually need versus what you simply want to display.
The biggest headache in any narrow home is seating that also sleeps people. You have relatives from out of town, a friend who missed the last train, and nowhere to put them except an inflatable mattress that deflates by 3 AM. This is where a sofa bed becomes your secret weapon. I tested three different mechanisms before settling on a model with a click-clack mechanism that folds flat in under ten seconds. The key is that the sofa bed must feel like a real couch during the day. Look for a frame with a slatted frame underneath the cushions, because a solid base traps heat and makes the mattress feel damp. A good slatted frame lets air circulate and gives the sleep surface a bit of spring. Pair that with a 16 cm foam mattress that folds inside the frame, and your guests will actually want to stay the whole weekend.

But here is the real trick. That foam mattress inside the sofa bed takes up space inside the seating area, which means the couch itself sits higher off the ground than a standard sofa. I learned this the hard way when I bought a sleek, low profile model and ended up with a seat height that made my legs go numb after half an hour. For townhouse interior design, you need to sit on the showroom model for at least ten minutes. Check that your feet touch the floor comfortably. Also measure the depth. A shallow seat works better in a narrow room because it leaves more walking space behind the coffee table. My current couch has velvet upholstery in a dark olive tone that hides wine spills and cat hair, and the fabric softens the sharp lines of the room. Velvet upholstery also catches the light from that single window and makes the whole space feel warmer.
Storage is the other monster. Townhouse bedrooms are often small, with sloped ceilings on the top floor and awkward corners on the lower levels. You cannot just shove a king sized bed in there and hope for the best. I ripped out a standard bed frame and replaced it with a bed with storage built into the base. Mine has four deep drawers that pull out from the footboard, and they hold all my winter blankets, extra pillows, and a set of sheets for the sofa bed. The mattress sits on a slatted frame that lifts up for access to a hidden compartment underneath, which is where I stash the bulky duvets. If you choose a bed with storage, make sure the slats are close enough together that a foam mattress does not sag through. A gap of more than five centimeters between slats will ruin your sleep quality over time.
That pull-out sofa I mentioned earlier also needs a permanent home for its bedding. I solved this by building a shallow cabinet next to the staircase. It is only thirty centimeters deep, but it holds two sets of linens, a folded blanket, and the extra pillowcases. The cabinet door has a mirror on the front, which doubles the visual space and bounces light around the hallway. This kind of hack is what separates functional townhouse interior design from a room that just feels cramped. You have to accept that every vertical surface is potential storage. Hang shelves above doors. Use the risers of your stairs as drawer fronts. My neighbor converted the underside of his stairs into a pull out wine rack and a tiny desk for his laptop. The space was wasted before, just a dark triangle where shoes piled up.
I also struggled with the dining area. The table blocked the flow to the kitchen. So I swapped a fixed table for a drop leaf model that folds down to the width of a sideboard. When it is closed, the room feels three feet wider. When I open it for four people, the leaves lock into place on a single metal leg. I attached a shelf to the wall above it, exactly 75 centimeters high, so the table slides underneath when not in use. That shelf holds my everyday plates and glasses. The visual trick is to keep the color palette tight. I used pale oak for the table and chairs, white walls, and that same olive velvet from the couch on two dining chairs. The consistency makes the small floor plan read as one intentional space rather than a jumble of mismatched rectangles.
Lighting in a townhouse is a constant battle. The single window in the living area leaves the back half of the room dark even at noon. I installed a long track light on the ceiling that runs parallel to the staircase, with three adjustable heads. One points at the dining shelf, one at the sofa, and one at the wall opposite the window. That wall I painted a matte navy blue to absorb glare and add depth. A mirror hung at eye level on that wall reflects the window light back into the room. The combination of direct task lighting and the reflected daylight tricks the eye into thinking the room is larger than its actual dimensions. Townhouse interior design is essentially a series of optical illusions held together by smart joinery and the right fabric choices.
After two years of tweaking, my townhouse finally works. The slatted frame on the sofa bed still feels solid. The bed with storage still slides open without a squeak. The velvet upholstery on the couch has survived three dinner parties and one red wine incident with nothing but a quick blot and a steam clean. The click-clack mechanism on the sofa bed still clicks into place like the day I bought it. The lesson is simple. Every piece in a narrow home must do double duty, and it must do it well enough that you forget it is multipurpose. Good design disappears into daily life. Bad design nags at you from the corner of the room. Focus on the hidden mechanics, the slats, the drawers, the fold down leaves, and the rest will follow.