






🖤 Elevate your media game with style and space you deserve!
The 56" Triple Tower Media Storage by Prepac is a robust, black laminate finished cabinet designed to hold up to 960 CDs, 405 DVDs, or a mix of media formats. Featuring 21 adjustable shelves and a wide pedestal base for enhanced stability, this freestanding unit combines practical storage with a sleek, modern aesthetic. Engineered wood construction and included safety anchors make it a reliable and stylish solution for organizing your media collection.

































| ASIN | B001KW0BE2 |
| Additional Features | Adjustable |
| Assembly Instructions Description | The Prepac Narrow Cabinet Media Storage includes detailed, step-by-step instructions and all necessary parts for assembly. It can typically be assembled in 60 minutes or less with basic hand tools by 2 people. |
| Back Style | Closed Back |
| Best Sellers Rank | #240,260 in Home & Kitchen ( See Top 100 in Home & Kitchen ) #374 in Storage Cabinets |
| Brand Name | Prepac |
| Color | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 5,679 Reviews |
| Finish Types | Laminated |
| Furniture Finish | Black |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00772398221311 |
| Included Components | Hardware |
| Installation Type | Wall Mount |
| Item Depth | 9.5 inches |
| Item Dimensions | 9.5 x 19.25 x 63.75 inches |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 9.5"D x 19.25"W x 63.75"H |
| Item Type Name | Media Storage |
| Item Weight | 37 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Prepac |
| Manufacturer Part Number | BMB-0400 |
| Manufacturer Warranty Description | Please refer to product description or store page. |
| Material | Engineered Wood |
| Material Type | Engineered Wood |
| Minimum Required Door Width | 19.25 Inches |
| Model Name | Prepac Barrister Narrow Storage Cabinet |
| Model Number | BMB-0400 |
| Mounting Type | Wall Mount |
| Number Of Shelves | 9 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Number of Shelves | 9 |
| Product Care Instructions | refer to instructions |
| Recommended Uses For Product | media storage, media display, collectible storage, collectible display |
| Required Assembly | No |
| Room Type | Dining Room, Library, Living Room, Study Room |
| Set Name | Slim Barrister Tower |
| Shape | Rectangular |
| Shelf Thickness | 9.5 Inches |
| Shelf Type | unspecified |
| Size | 19.25" Wide |
| Special Feature | Adjustable |
| Specific Uses For Product | unspecified |
| Style Name | American |
| UPC | 772398221311 856182111689 |
| Weight Capacity | Minimum weight: 81 Pounds |
| Weight Capacity Maximum | 81 Pounds |
P**E
Sturdy, well made flat-pack style shelf for your physical media.
Most importantly, this shelf is manufactured in the USA by Prepac. With that being said, the fitment and quality of the pieces and hardware of this shelf is much better than what I've experienced building similar shelves from overseas. There weren't any fitment issues with the pieces or location of the holes drilled. For the price, you're getting a great shelf even though it's particle board and "engineered" wood. The flatpack box it comes in is approximately 63 inches long, 7 inches wide and 7 inches thick and weighs about 60lbs, which is quite heavy. Easy to assemble as there aren't many unique parts for the brief instructions. As others have stated, use a little bit of wood glue on the pegs and mating surfaces to make the self more sturdy, not a lot is required, just a few drops. The shelves are configurable after the shelf is built very easily. Although the shelflets don't extend all the way to the backboard leaving a small 1/4 inch gap where small or thin items can fall through. Primarily meant for physical media in their cases. Configured for DVD's, you'll get 6 usable spaces per column with an extra smaller space as seen in the picture. For Blurays or Nintendo Switch game cases, you can get 7 or 8 spaces per column with an extra space. The shelf base is thicker than the shelves giving them stability and the unit comes with plastic feet that tack nail into the bottom base for hardwood floors. Handsome black finish that seems less prone to chipping verses other cheaper units i've assembled from overseas. It finally includes a zip-tie style wall anchor, important if you live in a household with small children or pets, for tip-over safety. As an assembly tip, the extra particle board piece you get in the box (which isn't used for the shelf itself) is actually used to stand the shelf face-down level as the top is slightly shorter than the longer base, helpful to have since the backboard is held in place with tack nails which are provided in the hardware kit.
D**1
Great build quality
Most of this type of furniture I find disappointing, but was pleasantly surprised with this unit. The build quality is top-notch compared to most laminate-wrapped particleboard furniture. As the price and style indicate, this isn't heirloom quality, but it is well made, goes together easily, and looks good. The price seems pretty reasonable. Assembly took a little under an hour by myself. The best bit of assembly advice is to drill pilot holes for nailing the backer boards on. The nails themselves are sort of cheap and bend easily, but there are lots of them. I also laid it down to attach the backer boards instead of standing it up as the instructions stated. Since kiddos aren't a concern here and it is sitting on tile, I did not attach the anchors. It seems quite stable without them, and I'll be adding more books to the bottom shelf. The unit I received did not have any of the issues some others have reported. No scratches, missing parts, etc. I think it looks good and I'm happy to have my CDs out again.
S**A
These do the job well.
At this point, I've bought and assembled 4 Double Width, 1 Triple Width and 1 Quad Width Wall Storage Cabinets (each are separate product listings on Amazon), to fill half a room with media storage, and I've been satisfied with Prepac's product. Each of the cabinets arrived without anything but the most minor cosmetic damage. All of the proper parts, hardware and instructions have been included, and assembly has been relatively simple. A power drill has been helpful to get the longer base screws into all of the vertical panels, but I have used a manual screwdriver to get them in as well. The composite board these are made from is relatively dense, giving the cabinets some weight and durability. The included nail-on gliders on the bottom helped me get the cabinets in place without scratching the floor. The cabinets are strong enough to completely fill with CDs, DVDs and or blu-rays without any bowing, leaning, or other concerns with the build quality. They're strong and stable enough, as long as they're against the wall. NOTE: These are made to be at least placed against walls, if not fastened to walls. For stability, the bases protrude about 3 inches in front and almost 2 inches on each side, but not at all in the back, so if not at least placed against a wall, it can tip over backward pretty easily. I've arranged my room to place 2 of the cabinets back-to-back and that's been stable. As for the hardware included to fasten them to walls, people seem to complain about these, and prefer finding their own solution for that. I've been fine with setting them along my walls, and back-to-back. The most trouble I've had with assembly is properly lining up and nailing on the hard paperboard backings and fitting the metal shelf pegs into the interior holes, as some of them can be pretty tight. I've used light tapping with a mallet and learned not to push them in all the way if they're hard to get in there, and that's worked well for me if I need to remove them to adjust the shelves. My all-over satisfaction with all of the various Prepac cabinets has been generally high. They do the job well, but don't reach my highest ideal. I decided to go with these after reading reviews and considering the alternatives, this seemed like my best option without spending a lot more, having shelves custom-built, et cetera. One thing I'd have really appreciated with the double-width and triple-width cabinets is if they were taller by the height of 1 or 2 CD sized shelves. That would make the cabinets the best size for CD, DVD and blu-ray cases to be placed on shelves vertically, meaning 9-10 CD case shelves tall, 6-7 DVD case shelves tall, or 7-8 blu-ray case shelves tall. The way these are, if you space the shelves for the height of the cases, you can have 6 blu-ray-height shelves with room left over, or 5 DVD-height shelves with room left over for 1 shelf of CDs. If you're not storing CDs in there, you can have an extra shelf where you stack cases on their sides, but another 5 1/2 inches of height would have gone a long way. As these are, the height is only slightly over half the height of my walls, but they still offer a lot of storage. The quad-width cabinet is taller, meaning significantly more shelving for movies. Here are my notes on actual, real world storage capacity, using real disc cases, and ensuring they fit comfortably in the shelves without squeezing them in too tightly. For CDs, I used all standard single-width jewel cases for measurement. For DVDs, I used all standard-width DVD cases. For blu-rays, the cases range in width so often, and also often blu-rays are sold with slipcovers, in steelbooks, etc., I used the average single releases in my collection. If you're storing only the normal slim blue cases, you'll be able to fit more blu-rays on the shelves. Also, this reporting is based on storage similar to described above, without consideration for stacking cases in horizontally to use up the excess space, also without consideration for being able to place anything on top of the cabinets. 40 CDs per shelf: double width cabinet capacity (16 shelves) = 640 CDs; triple width cabinet capacity (24 shelves) = 960 CDs; quad width cabinet capacity (38 shelves) = 1,520 CDs 28 DVDs per shelf: double width cabinet capacity (10 shelves) = 280 DVDs; triple width cabinet capacity (15 shelves) = 420 DVDs; quad width cabinet capacity (26 shelves) = 728 DVDs 30 blu-rays wide per shelf: double width cabinet capacity (12 shelves) = 360 blu-rays; triple width cabinet capacity (18 shelves) = 540 blu-rays; quad width capacity (30 shelves) = 900 blu-rays I can recommend these cabinets to anyone who doesn't need anything too fancy. They do make my large collection look handsome, and they're good, stable shelves. They're pretty clearly composite board cabinets I bought and assembled, not pieces of hardwood furniture, but they're nice for what they are. They're available and affordable. After buying 6 cabinets of varying sizes and having no significant complaint about them, the Prepac cabinets get my stamp of approval.
T**©
Perfect for the price point. Take your time on assembly and use wood glue at intersections.
I give five stars not because it's a premium piece of solid hardwood furniture - but because I think it's a great value for its price point, particularly at the discount that appeared on the day I committed the purchase. The overall quality is about as good as we see for these kinds of kits. If you've never assembled anything similar, you may face some frustrations but if you have, you're probably going the extra mile by using wood glue on the areas where edges meet, on the dowel pins, and most especially the backing. As the instructions advised, make sure you have at least the center shelves in place, stood up once first and make sure the assembled frame is level before you work on the backing. And I recommend you apply the backing with it face down, get your panels aligned so the edges all meet the middle of the sections you're going to nail to, and you must nail very carefully to the edges. Put your three backings down, and squeeze the assembly left to right to close gaps, use something heavy to weight down each side of your panels so they don't shift around, while you open one side of a Time carefully and apply thin layer of wood glue everywhere it contacts, but not so much it's going to bleed out of the edges. Drops would be fine. The particle board edges will absorb glue quickly so you have to work fast. I hustled laying down a glue layer first, quickly compressed it together and nailed corners, then nailed the midway points, finally making rounds until it's all secured. Using glue on final assembly carefully will make it structurally more solid, and the backing is important for structural stability. I ended up with a perfectly level assembly all said and done and I finally have a singular container for all my media.
S**L
Solid particle board shelves
Good for the price. It looks nice and particle board is sufficient to hold my small games. I followed a different recommendation and used a square while I had it laying flat on a table. I also put some shelves in perpendicular to the end result to help hold it square while I was able to hammer downwards. Trying to nail the back on with it upright would be a pain. I also recommend nailing the top and bottom of the back before doing the sides, it helped to keep them straight. Once assembled, my unit has zero side to side wobble and only a tiny bit of rocking if I try to pull it forward, but that's probably more because my floors aren't super level. I was a bit surprised that there was a gap behind each shelf. It works fine for my purposes, but small things could slide off the backs of the shelves.
P**S
Unbelievably shoddy design
Storage cabinets for CD’s, DVD’s and VHS tapes are becoming as obsolete as the media they are meant to store, no company wants to make the investment to design anything worthwhile so virtually everything being sold is junk. Including this one. The big difference is that most of the others sell for about $45 bucks, which is about what they are worth. This one’s price is in the stratosphere and before you read another word, take my advice, it’s not worth it. I bought it for one reason, I have a lot of audio and video recordings on those obsolete formats and they are scattered all over the house. Almost every cabinet that holds a large quantity of media is low profile so it takes up a lot of floor space, which is at a premium in my house. This one is unusually tall and has a unique width that fits exactly between my closet door and the corner of the room. That is the one and only reason I kept it. If you are still considering this product, then at least read the following information and tips so you know what you are getting in for. TIP 1 When I am shopping for something I start with the one star reviews, they are usually the most informative about what’s wrong with a product and least likely to be bogus reviews placed by the seller or people who got free samples. Here’s what you will find in those low rating reviews. That they (a Canadian company, not Chinese) are careless to the point of irresponsibility in prepping it to get to you – everything is carelessly tossed inside with no protection other than a white foam that is carelessly sprayed all over the parts themselves. It absolutely does not come off no matter what I’ve tried, if you care at all about how the finished cabinet looks you will be disappointed, the ugly white foam covers many of the parts that show. TIP 2 Like most cheap RTA (ready to assemble) furniture this is made from MDA which is a way of hiding the fact that it is compressed sawdust covered with an extremely thin vinyl. There are actually some fairly nice products made from MDA, this isn’t one of them, it is the lowest grade like you would find at the dollar store. Except this costs many dollars, it is unbelievably overpriced. Compared to other products this should sell for no more than forty-five bucks at the most. TIP 3 Unlike most Chinese-made furniture that is usually precisely sized this looks like someone made it in their back yard after a few beers. Those useless front trim pieces that so many complain about because they make CD/DVD cases at either end impossible to access are about an eighth of an inch too long. I had to cut them with a hacksaw. No one who buys a cabinet that costs this much should have to correct pieces that are made incorrectly. IF you aren’t handy with shop tools, do not buy this cabinet. TIP 4 The flimsy piece of cardboard they call a back panel is too small. If you nail it on like you would on similar cabinets the tall sides are pulled in too much which results in the shelves not fitting. The instructions don’t say a word about this. The guy who made this could have avoided this problem if he had just put a fixed shelf mid-way between the top and bottom. SOLUTION: and this is a must – before you start to nail the back on install two shelves, one 8 peg holes down from the top and one 8 peg holes up from the bottom. That will spread the sides enough while you attach the cardboard back so you can then install (and adjust) the rest of the shelves. And by the way, they use the absolute cheapest aluminum nails that bend at the slightest tap. TIP 5 This is another must-do. I recommend never assembling any RTA furniture without using a good grade of wood glue. You will never end up with a serviceable item if you don’t. And it is especially true with something like this that uses absolutely no bracing of any kind. Glue every wood-to-wood surface except the shelves of course. TIP 6 I have never seen any company include a black felt marker for you to touch up their mistakes. And you will need it. Fortunately it matches close enough to cover places where the thin vinyl is scratched or marred. YES OR NO As I said I didn’t return this because it fits the space I have available and it’s not in a location where looking good is that important to me. After it was assembled, with me correcting their mistakes, it holds my remaining library of CD’s, DVD’s and VHS tapes. I can’t recommend it for all of the reasons covered above but most of all because it is unbelievably shoddy for the price which is way too high.
M**E
Generous space
Strong, easy assembly, and holds all my movies. Was at a good price and the consolidated storage is great. Stable and quite heavy when full, but not before filled. There were no missing parts and stands stable up to the wall
M**M
Decent for what it is with a few large drawbacks
I have high standards for furniture and tend to not buy flat-packed furniture at all if I can help it. In this case I got tired of having my CD collection in bins and wanted a cheap, temporary solution for storing them while I finished plans for a more permanent shelving unit. At first I was pleasantly surprised with the quality. No scuffs or damaged edges, holes were bored at the correct size and in the correct place, the design of it is simple but effective. When assembled it's pretty sturdy (although I used wood glue where the side columns meet the top to add some additional strength). For anyone wondering exactly what they're getting, the sides are basically 5/8" paneled Melamine, whereas the shelves are finished in the same veneer but over MDF instead. And that's where the problems start. The undersides of the shelves and the undersides of the top and bottom pieces are exposed MDF. This thing off-gasses really horribly. It's been four days since I assembled it and when I open the door to the room it's in I'm hit with a wall of chemical smells (and this is with a window being left open). It's worse than Milwaukee Packouts. Had all sides of all the boards been veneered then this would be much less of an issue. The part of assembly that will also likely give people trouble is the backing board. You have to nail this to the back of the unit as the final step and I don't see a world in which the average person misses the sides or center column and bangs at least a couple of nails through the thin backing board. I used an 18ga narrow crown stapler for this which was much easier. Wall anchoring is also an issue. The wall anchor system is a screw set into the back of the unit, a screw into your wall, and a piece of wire between them. This is completely inadequate for something that's only the depth of a single CD. If you have curious cats then this is going to get knocked over very easily, and even if the wire prevents it from fully falling over, everything on your shelves is falling off. I added French cleats to the back of the unit and the wall to prevent it from falling. The final problem is the complete lack of leveling options for the feet. The feet are just tiny plastic pads that nail into the bottom. If you have totally level floors then this may be sufficient for you. Most floors however are not perfectly level, especially where they meet the wall. Having threaded feed that could be screwed in and out would help massively and wouldn't add much to the manufacturing process, they'd just need to bore four more holes on the bottom and add some t-nuts. I did exactly that and it helped dramatically. All in all it's a decent unit and I'm grateful I found something to finally get my CD collection displayed. But it was purchased so I didn't need to build my own right away and instead it's caused me to move that project to the top of my to-do list just because of the shortcomings of these. If you have a friend who has a saw, a drill, and a little bit of free time then just have them build you something instead.
J**E
These are perfect to hold your movies / box sets. I have 2 triples and 1 double and I am super happy with them!
I now have 2 of the triple and 1 of the double wall media storages. These are perfect to hold your movies / box sets. The image displayed is a little misleading though. I believe ours holds 5 rows of DVD / Blu Ray height media and 1 row of CD height media. But you can fit quite a few per row (really depends on the thickness of the box set or movie). Ours holds between 30 - 35 Blu Rays per row or 16-20 box sets (depending on the witch of the box set) per row. So a double media storage would hold: 300 - 350 Blu Rays or 160 - 200 box sets And a triple media storage would hold: 450 - 525 Blu Rays or 240 - 300 box sets This is solid but you will want it up next to a wall or anchored to the wall. Super easy to construct. I put all 3 together and each only took about 20 minutes. It took longer to decide where they were going than to actually put them together.
L**P
pas mal d'espace de rangement, un look sobre
Un bon deal car acheté d'occasion pour cause de défauts cosmétiques alors qu'en fait c'est quasi imperceptible. Sinon je ne sais pas si je l'aurais acheté le plein prix. Pas compliqué à monter, juste un peu long. J'ai eu peur en clouant le fond de taper "à coté" et que ça se voit sur l'endroit car le fond est un peu plus petit que les rebords où il doit être cloué, faut vraiment y faire attention. J'ai eu du mal à bien insérer les barres latérales, à faire en sorte que les chevilles en plastique soient bien enfoncées dans les deux parties du meuble. A part ça, pas mal d'espace de stockage de CD et DVD. Je ne sais pas si c'est robuste, on verra avec le temps, mais ça a l'air assez solide, et également stable (je ne l'ai pas fixé au mur) une fois bien remplie. Le seul truc potentiellement gênant, ce sont les rebords sur les cotés et en hauts, qui cache un peu les CD/DVD, mais c'est vraiment mineur.
K**6
Stylish , sleek and sturdy !
This shelf has been a godsend for organizing my vast movie collection. It is lightweight but very sturdy . Its dimensions are perfect as it is a perfect height but the exact narrowness for blu-ray cases etc . I have it along my hallway wall and plan to purchase an additional one for another room in my house . It was incredibly easy to put together which was a huge plus .
V**X
A stand that was well thought out and built properly
I am quite impressed with the design of this, I mean how it assembles was well thought out... only thing I really didn't like is those thin backing boards you have to try to nail on with millimetre precision. They need a better way to help align it without punching nails through the sides of it. Otherwise you should be quite impressed with the ease of assembling it. Now only issue is trying to match it with the media you have. I really hate how bluray cases are not all uniform so someone with OCD it drives me mad when everything doesn't perfectly fit in symmetrical harmony. Yes, I'm referring to steelbook cases and those odd shaped cardboard cases, season box sets and other things that make you want to beat someone with a club! Trying to decide on shelf height when one is too big and another too small, working out the math of bluray vs DVD vs cd vs video game optimization and uniformity, I can't take it... so I ordered one for each... ok, much better. Oh right, about the stand! It's really a great stand, I love it a lot and it looks great, feels sturdy and everything else, but the reference pic they use is what would drive me mad... if that doesn't bother you, then your in a win win situation, otherwise trying to find that perfect symmetry and shelf height where everything feels just right and one with the universe takes some time.
J**N
Small space? This is the bookshelf for you!
Very easy to install. Comes with lots of shelves (i didnt even use all of mine). Looks nice all set up. Holds alot of bluray movies or books. The shelf itself is not very deep, so its perfect for small spaces and doesnt stick out from the wall very much.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 weeks ago