I would rather take it up and down than deal with otherwise great compromises. At one point, when my kids were babies and toddlers, the only place I could get my fix was out back in my tool shed, 30ft from the house. That was worlds better than listening to a system on eggshells in the home. I could set up my 3-way floor standers on my work bench and just stand between them and really scratch the itch. Commando style listening is underrated. I was glad to discover I could do such a thing without being left in a corner somewhere with a transistor radio.
Commando listening will never win any awards, but it has been a welcome diversion from audio starvation, or feeling like an outcast in my own home. I know this likely horrifies more educated and civilized people, but I was so happy to have something like this to do, even if it was born of desperation. Funnier part of it being, when the kids went to sleep, my ex-wife would end up out there with me at times after she discovered I was enjoying myself a bit too much, and she even put a baby monitor out there so she could do so without much worry.
Yeah, I would definitely do a break down system than a restricted one. I kind of feel like I managed to win, even during some of the most inconvenient times.
Ever noticed the traffic patterns in a wall-to-wall carpet? Nobody really goes where speakers can fit. In one house, I would lay them on their sides obscured by the sofas with the drivers facing the walls so the kids couldn't get at them. Sometimes I would end up with a weekend to myself here and there when her and kids used to go visit relatives while work kept me in town. I could set up in minutes and rock out for hours. Was certainly much more convenient than going to a live show, or even out to eat, for that matter. It's not for everyone, but perhaps it may inspire an option for those who may just have no other way, or are in a rental that they can't cut holes in the walls at.
I could stand and listen to my speakers on the bench for hours on end. Eventually I put a tall bar chair out there. Convenience is a weird thing at times, where someone might see such an effort as an inconvenience or as a chore, yet will go to a gym and lift weights, or some other work that isn't much different. As a single dad for a number of years, keeping up with my kids laundry and dinner was the real chores. Moving my speakers around seemed so trite, comparatively.
This is where notions of my ghetto tabletop systems that I set up and post here were born. You would be surprised how many people actually sit down at one of those and really get into it. They never considered it as a possibility. But some little near field system like this can stow in a 20" x 20" x 12" cardboard box which is no more difficult than digging out the family photo albums.
There's also an 8" subwoofer half under the end of the table out of site. 5 minutes and I can have a session with a pair of Jeff Bagby designed Continuums. Sometimes, all it takes is a spell of hopelessly doing without and remembering where one came from to find fortune in such a small amount of effort.
How about this one. A CD player, tiny class D amp and preamp, a makeshift stand, anywhere there is a wall outlet. These are treasures worth setting up where and when one can.