Used Furniture Ottawa Canada

We carry an eclectic mix of “new and gently used home furnishings”. Our 8,000 square foot showroom makes us one of the largest furniture consignment stores in Ontario. Total Home Consignment features items from builder’s model homes, store closures, bankruptcies, inventory liquidations, estate sales and items from some of the finest homes in the Ottawa area. Whether you’re looking for the perfect piece to finish a room, or furnishing a whole home, our quality selection and especially the price will amaze you! 5 PCS DINING SET 47″/62″ EXTENSION DINING TABLE We have model home furniture from these fine builders > furniture in Ottawa Get an alert with the newest ads for furniture in Ottawa.You’ve bought the house and now you want to put your personal stamp on it, but there’s not much left in the bank account for extras. Here are three bargain outlets that can help you stretch the budget. Where: 1860 Bank St. near Walkley Road and behind the Beer Store
Hours: Tuesday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. Tucked behind the Beer Store on Bank Street south of Walkley Road, this 9,000-square-foot store is one of Ottawa’s best kept secrets.Wicker Furniture For Office From the outside, it looks like a rundown warehouse, but inside, it’s a sprawling showroom of new, used and antique furnishings. Vinyl Flooring Road MapTreasures range from crystal vases, table lamps and framed prints to full bedroom suites, leather sectionals and formal dining room sets.Sell Tires Ottawa “It’s for anybody looking for deals,” says owner Richard Abrams of his store’s widespread appeal. Customers include cash-strapped homeowners in need of affordable furniture to professional stagers stocking up on toss cushions, area carpets and artwork to decorate a home for quick sale.
Since Abrams and his wife, Barb, opened the store six and a half years ago, they’ve sold thousands of furnishings and accessories from the decorated model homes of several Ottawa builders, including Minto, Urbandale and Richcraft. Abrams says he often gets complete room settings, right down to the cloth napkins and ceramic dinner plates with faux food glued to them. Estate sales, store closures and bankruptcies are other great sources for his bargain-priced merchandise, he says, as well as downsizers, divorcees and people relocating to another city. Prices start at 50 to 60 per cent off the original cost, but are reduced 10 per cent every 15 days until the item sells. On a recent visit, a three-piece leather sofa set was spotted for $1,999, new tufted headboards for $199 and a four-poster bed in a dark espresso finish for $402. What you won’t find: Electronics, used mattresses and exercise equipment. Where: 1523 Lapierriere Ave. between Clyde and Kirkwood avenues
Hours: Shop is open Thursday and Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and weekends, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Auctions are held every second Sunday (excluding July and August) with previewing at 9 a.m. and the auction starting at 10 a.m. The next one is May 24. Every two weeks, as many as 250 bargain hunters squeeze into the back room of Diana Fuller’s west-end warehouse in hopes of snapping up a great deal. Everything from antique porcelain dolls, crystal and mid-century furniture to sterling silver tea sets, farm tools and glitzy diamond earrings could be on the auction block that day. “You can always find something new, interesting and exciting,” says Fuller, a certified appraiser and auctioneer, of the treasure trove of furniture, dishware, knick-knacks and jewelry culled from private estate sales, store liquidations and business bankruptcies. The consignment shop at the front of the warehouse gives shoppers a chance to “preview what’s coming up in auction,” says Fuller, who opened the storefront about four years ago, but has been doing estate and industrial appraisals for the past 16 years.
“But you can just buy it if you want.” Bartering, she insists, is always welcome. On a recent visit, there was a throwback 1970s vinyl patchwork couch and matching chair for $200. What you won’t find: “There’s nothing we don’t sell,” says Fuller. Where: 768 Belfast Rd. near Ottawa Train Yards and 7 Enterprise Ave. off Merivale Road Hours: Monday to Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. Info: 613-744-7769 (east) and 613-225-8400 (west); Myrna Beattie can’t get over how quickly her stock of toilets is multiplying. “Last week, we had one. Now, there are 13,” says the director of retail operations at the east-end store. Besides toilets, the non-profit, home-improvement stores sell everything to build, renovate, repair or decorate a home or cottage, including new and used doors and windows, kitchen cabinets, bathroom fixtures, mouldings, ceiling lights and floor tiles. They even carry a small selection of used appliances and furniture.
“You really do have to come often. We get new products every day,” says Beattie, who on a recent visit was especially proud of the high-end Euro tiles donated from local businesses. “There aren’t huge quantities, but enough to do a foyer or backsplash.” New products are priced 50 per cent below retail cost while used items range from a few dollars for hardware to a couple thousand for a full kitchen. There is no HST on any purchases and no returns or exchanges. The money raised through the ReStores is used to build simple and affordable homes for the working poor. “We are a charity and we’re trying to build five more homes this summer in Orléans,” says Beattie, adding there are 97 ReStores across Canada. The Belfast location is also a certified e-waste depot, where you can drop off old TVs, DVD players, computers and other electronics for recycling. On a recent tour, we found a solid oak pedestal table with a leaf for $125, a wooden front door with decorative glass panes for $100 and a smoked glass chandelier for $60.