Closets, Wardrobes &
Rooms That Sleep More
Wire racks are rentals. We build closets like furniture: solid wood, real drawers, and layouts designed from what you actually own.
Closet companies sell modules. We start somewhere else: with what you own. Long hang or mostly folded? Sixty pairs of shoes or six? Do suitcases live here? The answers size every section, which is why our closets end up with no dead corners and no empty rod stretches. Professional organizers make the same point about inventory-first planning, and the National Association of Productivity and Organizing Professionals is worth reading before any closet project, ours included.
Construction is furniture-grade because bedrooms deserve it: solid hardwood faces, plywood carcases, dovetail drawers that glide on full-extension slides. The same standard as our built-in bookcases, in rooms where you start and end every day.
The same skills solve sleeping rooms too: our murphy bed project turns an office into a guest room in ten seconds, and the built-in bunk room sleeps four grandkids in the footprint of one queen bed.
“Measure your hanging clothes before believing any closet plan. Most people need far less rod and far more drawers than they think. The happiest closets we build are one third hanging, two thirds drawers and shelves, almost nobody guesses that ratio correctly.”






Start With the Counting
Send photos of the closet as it really looks, no tidying. The mess is the design brief, and we have seen far worse than yours.