I went into nursery shopping convinced it was all the same wood, different price tag. Cynical? Absolutely. I’d already wasted money on one flat-pack cot that wobbled by month three, so my guard was up. Then a friend with two kids and zero patience for marketing told me to actually look at how a nursery is supposed to work – not as a one-off purchase, but as a room that keeps up with a child who changes every six months. That single reframe is what this whole guide is built on.
Here’s the question nobody asks early enough. What happens to all this furniture when your newborn becomes a toddler, then a proper schoolkid with opinions? Most of it goes to landfill or a charity shop, and you buy again. The brand that kept pulling me out of that cycle was Boori, the Australian solid-wood nursery specialist, because its whole design language is “grow with your child” rather than “buy it twice.” This is the definitive walk-through I wish I’d had – newborn cot to big-kid bed, with the honest bits left in.
At a glance: what to know about Boori
Solid wood from certified sustainable plantations – hand-selected and laser-measured to cut waste, not flat-pack chipboard or MDF.
Convertible designs: cots turn into toddler beds and beyond via conversion kits, so one frame spans newborn to school age.
Heritage since 1993, its own purpose-built factory, 1 to 5 year warranties, free mainland-UK delivery, and a coordinating range in matching finishes (Barley White, Almond, Cherry).
Why “grows with your child” is more than a slogan
Let me push back on my own scepticism for a second, because I assumed this was clever copywriting. It isn’t, or at least not only that. A grow-with-your-child design means the cot you buy at week one physically reconfigures into the next thing your child needs, instead of being replaced. That’s an engineering promise, not a vibe. And once you see it laid out across a whole room, the logic clicks.
Think about how fast they change. Newborn. Crawler. Climber. Toddler who refuses bars. Then a kid who wants a desk and a “big” bed. Why on earth would furniture stay frozen while all that happens? Boori’s answer is a coordinated system where the cot, storage, highchair and beds share finishes and design DNA, so the room evolves without ever looking mismatched. If you want to see how the pieces line up, browse Boori’s coordinating nursery range and notice how the finishes repeat across categories.
Stage one: the newborn cot
This is where it starts, and it’s the piece you’ll stare at most in those bleary 3am feeds. A convertible cot is the foundation of the whole grow-with-your-child idea. The frame you choose now should be the same frame your child sleeps in as a toddler, just reconfigured. So the question isn’t “is this cot nice.” It’s “where does this cot go next?”

What sold me on the solid-wood route was the build honesty. This is timber hand-selected from certified sustainable plantations and laser-measured to cut waste, not chipboard wearing a wood-effect sticker. It feels different the moment you touch the rail. Will a newborn appreciate that? No. But you will, every time you lean on it half-asleep, and a frame that doesn’t loosen is a frame that survives the conversions to come. Have a look at the Boori convertible cots and check how each one lists its stages.
The stages, mapped out
It helps to see the journey as a single line rather than a pile of separate buys. Here’s roughly how a grow-with-your-child room unfolds, and what each stage is really asking of your furniture. Note how the same frame keeps doing new jobs.
| Stage | Roughly when | What the room needs |
|---|---|---|
| Newborn cot | 0 – 12 months | A safe, solid frame and adjustable mattress base |
| Toddler bed | ~1.5 – 3 years | Same frame, low side off, easy in-and-out |
| Storage + play | 2 – 5 years | Under-bed drawers, a learning tower, safe climbing |
| Desk + study | 3 – 6 years | A height-adjustable desk that scales with them |
| Big-kid bed | 5+ years | A junior or loft bed with real personality |
See the pattern? You’re not rebuying five times. You’re extending one decision. That’s the part the price tag hides on day one and rewards you for on day one thousand. To map your own child’s stages against real products, start with Boori’s grow-with-your-child collection.
Mealtimes: the highchair that earns its corner
Once weaning starts, the highchair becomes the most-used object in your house. I’m not exaggerating. Three meals plus snacks, every single day, for a couple of years. So a wobbly plastic one is a daily small irritation, while a solid wooden one that wipes clean and tucks neatly to the table is a quiet relief. Small thing? Maybe. But the small things repeated 2,000 times stop being small.

What I appreciate here is the coordination again. A highchair in the same finish family as the cot and storage means the kitchen and nursery feel connected, not cobbled together from five different brands. And because it’s the same solid-wood build, it shrugs off the food, the throwing, the wipe-downs. If mealtimes are about to become your new full-time job, the Boori highchair options are worth a proper look.
Storage: the unglamorous hero
Nobody gets excited about drawers. I certainly didn’t. But the parents I trust all say the same thing – storage is what keeps a small room livable once the toys multiply. And toys multiply alarmingly. Under-bed drawers are the clever move, because they use the dead space beneath the bed your child already has, turning wasted air into a home for muslins, then nappies, then Lego.

Here’s my honest take. If budget forces you to skip something at the start, skip the decorative extras, never the storage. A coordinating under-bed drawer in the same finish as the bed keeps the room calm and clears the floor your toddler will soon be hurtling across. Want to see how the storage clicks into the wider system? Check the Boori storage and drawers and match them to your bed finish.
Buy the room as a system, not as a shopping list. The cot you choose at week one decides what the next four years cost you.
Learning and play: the bit I underrated
This is where my cynicism finally broke. I’d dismissed Montessori furniture as a trend with a price markup. Then I watched a friend’s toddler use a learning tower to “help” cook, and the penny dropped. A learning tower is just a safe step that brings a small child up to counter height, so they can be part of the action instead of grizzling at your ankles. It’s genuinely lovely to watch, and it buys you cooking time. Win-win.

Then there’s climbing. Toddlers will climb whether you provide for it or not, so the safer bet is purpose-built climbing furniture that channels all that energy into something designed to take it. Solid wood matters enormously here, because this is gear that gets hauled on, jumped off and trusted to hold. A flimsy build is a hazard. Have a look at the Boori learning and climbing furniture if you’ve got a little daredevil in the making.

The desk years: study furniture that scales
Blink, and they’re drawing, then writing, then doing actual homework. A child’s desk sounds premature until you realise how early the scribbling starts. The trick is a height-adjustable desk, because a fixed-height one is outgrown almost as fast as a pair of school shoes. Adjustable means it grows with them – the same grow-with-your-child logic, now at the study end of the room.

Why does the ergonomics matter so much? Because posture habits form early, and a desk at the right height keeps little backs and necks comfortable while they concentrate. The pegboard detail is a small joy too – it gives them a spot to make the space theirs, which, honestly, is half the battle with a reluctant homework-doer. When the scribbling phase arrives, the Boori desks and study furniture are an easy next step in the same finish.
The big-kid bed: the payoff stage
And here’s the part children genuinely care about. The big-kid bed is a milestone, a status symbol in a five-year-old’s world, and it’s where all that earlier solid-wood investment finally feels obvious. A loft bed with a teepee canopy isn’t just somewhere to sleep – it’s a fort, a reading nook, a small kingdom. The featured image at the top of this guide is exactly that kind of bed, and you can see why it lands.
This is the moment the whole grow-with-your-child philosophy pays off. The wood that survived the cot, the conversions, the climbing and the wipe-downs is still sturdy enough to hold a child who now climbs a ladder to bed. That’s three or four years of trust, repaid. If your little one is ready to graduate, the Boori big-kid and loft beds are where the journey gets fun.
The honest verdict
What won me over
Genuinely solid wood, a coordinated range that spans the whole journey, conversion kits that mean you buy once, and warranties of 1 to 5 years backing the build. It’s a system, not a shopping spree.
The one honest catch
The upfront price is higher than flat-pack, and there’s no pretending otherwise. You pay more on day one – and only feel the saving years later when you haven’t rebought.
So where did I land, after walking in ready to be unimpressed? Quietly converted. Not because the marketing wore me down, but because the logic holds up when you trace it across an actual childhood. Cot to highchair to storage to climbing tower to desk to that triumphant loft bed – it’s one decision, extended, in matching wood that lasts. Trusted by over a million parents worldwide, for what it’s worth, and now I see the appeal.
My only real reservation is that opening price, and the fix is mindset, not money: count the cost per year, not per receipt. If you’re setting up a nursery and you’d rather furnish it once than three times, this is the smart, slightly grown-up choice. Start where your child is right now and let the room grow with them. Begin your Boori nursery here and build the room that keeps up.
