
Design in Details
Considering how people actually use their living spaces on a daily basis, this custom media wall was designed to balance technology, proportion, and architectural refinement. The goal was to integrate a large-format television and media components without overpowering the room, allowing the cabinetry to feel intentional, calm, and permanent.
Rather than treating storage as an add-on, the design frames the wall as a single architectural element. Clean horizontal lines, precise symmetry, and a soft neutral finish create visual order, while concealed compartments keep technology organized and out of sight. Every dimension was adjusted to align with existing moldings, flooring, and wall proportions, ensuring the piece feels built-in rather than installed.
- Integrated Media Storage: Custom compartments designed specifically for audio and video equipment, allowing airflow while maintaining a clean façade.
- Architectural Alignment: Cabinet heights and widths aligned with crown molding, baseboards, and wall symmetry.
- Soft Neutral Finishes: A refined palette that complements patterned wall coverings and warm wood flooring.
- Hidden Functionality: Concealed wiring, drawers, and shelving to keep visual clutter to a minimum.
- Custom Hardware Selection: Brushed brass accents chosen to subtly elevate the piece without drawing attention away from the architecture.
Incredible Result
This media wall was designed to feel like it truly belongs in the room. It grounds the space without drawing unnecessary attention, allowing the television and daily use to coexist comfortably with the architecture. Nothing feels forced or oversized. Everything sits where it naturally makes sense.
The proportions were carefully tuned so the wall feels balanced the moment you walk in. Finishes stay calm, storage stays discreet, and the hardware does its job without asking to be noticed. What you see feels simple, but the thought behind it is deliberate.
The result is a living space that feels organized, quiet, and easy to live with. The cabinetry doesn’t compete with the room—it supports it, doing exactly what well-built millwork should do: work beautifully in the background.