The range
Six cabinet types.
Base cabinets
Cabinets under the counter for detergent, baskets, and bulk supplies, run the full length of the wall instead of stopping at a stock width.
Get a quote →Wall cabinets
Upper cabinets and open shelving above the machines, sized to your ceiling height so the top shelf is still reachable and nothing is wasted.
Get a quote →Tall utility cabinets
Floor-to-ceiling towers for the vacuum, ironing board, broom, and cleaning supplies, closed off in one run rather than left in a corner.
Get a quote →Folding counters
A continuous countertop over front-loaders, or a standalone folding station, in a surface built to take daily folding, spills, and detergent.
Get a quote →Sink base units
A utility sink cabinet with a moisture-tolerant interior, plumbed into the run and finished to match the rest of the room.
Get a quote →Hampers and drying
Pull-out hampers, tilt-out bins, and retractable drying rods built into the cabinet run, not bolted on after the fact.
Get a quote →Built to a small or awkward room.
The usual reason to go custom is a room where stock widths leave dead gaps: a narrow wall, a sloped ceiling, a recess around the machines. Because every cabinet is built to your exact opening, that space gets used instead of boxed off, and the run reads as one continuous piece rather than a row of mismatched boxes.
Finishes that take daily use.
A laundry room sees moisture, detergent, and constant handling, so the finish does more work here than in a dry room. A baked-on or laminate finish over a moisture-tolerant core wipes clean and holds its edges. Any color is available, specified the way an architect calls it out on a drawing, with the whole run finished to match.
Common questions
Built to your room
Send your room measurements, get a price.
Tell us the wall lengths and which runs you need. We come back with an itemized quote for the cabinetry built to your room.