story
> Frame: Plywood, Polyurethane foam 30 kg/cu.m., Particleboard, Solid wood, Fibreboard
An example of something that looks well-built is the Skogsta dining table [1].
> Table top: Solid acacia, Clear acrylic lacquer, Clear lacquer
> Leg/ Rail: Solid acacia, Acrylic paint
(Though the oak version, which costs more, is oak-veneered particleboard.)
Many Ikea things aren't designed to last. That table has cross-beams, so it has a better chance surviving a party where someone leans heavily against one end of it. Something like Mörbylånga [2] looks like it would collapse.
I would give the furniture on display a good shove to see how sturdy it is.
[1] https://www.ikea.com/gb/en/p/skogsta-dining-table-acacia-704...
[2] https://www.ikea.com/gb/en/p/moerbylanga-table-oak-veneer-br...
* Furniturewise the bathroom furniture, especially GODMORGON are ok. I think because they have to survice contact with humidity.
* The HILVER bamboo legs are that good, that we kept them even after getting rid of the cardboard table tops.
no you can't, the outside shell of each shelf completely hides what's inside. I wanted to reconfigure a shelf (turn it on it's side, combine it with another) and turns out the "boards" are hollow. There is something inside at the corner pre-drilled-screw anchor points, but that's the only place you can attach something, the rest of it is potemkin shelf. You get to see this in more detail if you keep a shelf in a mildly humid place like a beachhouse, as the whoe thing delaminates and you see cardboard honeycombs inside a thin veneer of ...veneer