Where fitted joinery earns its keep in Ealing
Ealing is our furthest-served postcode by typical project. The catchment is W5 (Ealing proper), W13 (West Ealing) and W7 (Hanwell). The housing stock is dominated by substantial Edwardian terraces and semis with generous room proportions — and a client base that tends to invest more per project than the East London average.
Master-bedroom wardrobe runs. Ealing’s Edwardian master bedrooms are often 4m+ wide with ceilings 2.9m+ — proportions that mean a full-height bespoke wardrobe run feels in scale with the room. We typically build five- or six-bay shaker wardrobes here, with mixed interiors including drawers, hanging rails and dedicated trouser pulls. The Ealing fitted wardrobe with mirror panel is a typical example.
Substantial front reception alcove units. Ealing front rooms have alcoves either side of a chimney breast that are often deeper and wider than the East London equivalent (350–450mm deep, 900–1100mm wide). We build painted shaker alcove units that scale to those proportions — full-height with detailed door styling, often in-frame for the higher-end briefs.
Bespoke kitchens. A significant chunk of our Ealing work is bespoke painted-shaker kitchens, typically as part of a wider renovation project. The kitchen is usually the room with the longest lead time and highest spend; we coordinate workshop slots so our work lands when the rest of the renovation is ready for cabinet install.
How we work with other contractors in Ealing
Most Ealing projects we’re brought into involve a broader renovation. Our standard pattern is: arrive after structural / plastering / floor / first-fix electric is complete; our joinery is one of the later phases. We coordinate with the contractor or interior designer on dates so we’re not in the way of the rest of the work, and we hand back the rooms decorated to standard so the final paint touch-up can happen after we leave.