Keep Them Spinning Vinyl Record Club Madrid listening room with Flying V wall mounts, Vinyl Modular cubes, jazz legend posters and turntable setup
Modular solid wood Engineered for LPs Designed in Spain Free Shipping

BrickBox is great for books.Vinyl needs more.

Beautiful Spanish modular cubes — for paperbacks and decor. We engineered around the 12-inch LP.

4.9/5 · 400+ Verified Reviews · Quality-inspected in Madrid

4.9/5 · 400+ Reviews
Solid wood · No MDF
Free Worldwide Shipping
30-Day Returns
The honest comparison

BrickBox solves shelving We solve vinyl.

BrickBox is great for books. It's just not built for vinyl: shallow depths, melamine finishes, no LP load logic. KTS exists for that gap.

Head-to-head

Side-by-side, line by line

BrickBox
Modular Cube Shelving
  • MaterialMelamine-finished particle board.
  • Built forBooks, magazines, decor — general purpose.
  • Internal depthOften <33cm — gatefolds and sleeves push the limit.
  • Load logicNo published vinyl capacity per cube.
  • SustainabilityParticle board with melamine — not FSC equivalent.
Keep Them Spinning
Vinyl Record System
  • MaterialFSC-certified solid wood. No aglomerate.
  • Built for12-inch LPs. Every dimension starts there.
  • Capacity logic50 LPs per cube. Predictable, every time.
  • ExpansionStack a new module today. Ships in 24-48h.
  • Returns30-day full returns. No custom-order trap.
Vinyl Stax 2x2 cabinet next to a Victorian fireplace, holding a curated record collection

BrickBox solves books.

We solve LPs — every joint, every dimension, every load rating engineered around the 12-inch sleeve.

The system

Start small. Stack forever.

One cube. Four cubes. A full station with a turntable on top. Every piece talks to the next — and your collection grows without buying new furniture.

Why collectors switch

Four reasons BrickBox can't match.

Solid wood, every cube

solid wood is FSC-certified, naturally acid-free, and lighter than oak. Particle board absorbs humidity and warps under sustained LP weight.

Designed for 12 inches

Every internal dimension fits a sleeve with breathing room. No 'should fit' — engineered to fit. Tested with first pressings, gatefolds and 180g audiophile releases.

Modular for life

Start at 50 LPs. Stack to 800. Same hardware, same joints, same finish — across years. Generic shelving configurations don't talk to each other.

Ships in 24-48h

Quality-inspected in Madrid, dispatched same week via DHL Express. Custom builds typically need 6-8 weeks production lead time.

Real Keep Them Spinning Madrid warehouse showing Vinyl Modular x4 storage and Batea record crates in use

After BrickBox, you'll still want real vinyl storage.

Skip the dual-purpose compromise. Cubes built for records from minute one.

Real setups

Built homes for real collections.

Customer photos. Real lighting. Real collections from 80 to 1,200 LPs.

Vinyl Stax in a Berlin loft with Teufel speakers
Vinyl Stax 2x2 next to a Victorian fireplace
12-module Vinyl Stax wall with Barcelona chair
Vinyl Stax with red and black doors, turntable and guitar
Frequently asked

Everything before you commit.

Melamine over particle board is fine for books — they're light and consistent. Vinyl is heavy, dimensional, and degrades when exposed to off-gassing from glued composites. solid wood is solid hardwood, FSC-certified, acid-free.

Per cube, sometimes. Per LP stored properly, no. BrickBox configurations marketed for vinyl often need accessory dividers, and the depth doesn't accommodate gatefolds without modification.

KTS has a cleaner, more vinyl-forward aesthetic — open-front for browsing, optional doors, single-tone solid wood. BrickBox is more mixed-material modular.

KTS ships in 24-48h from Madrid. BrickBox configurations are made-to-order with 2-4 week lead times.

KTS: 30-day full returns on every unit. BrickBox: custom configurations typically excluded — check before ordering.

Stop renting your records to furniture.

200+ LPs deserve a home that grows with them. Modular solid wood, designed in Spain, ships worldwide.

Shop the Modular System

Sources & further reading