Carpentry · Dublin 4, Dublin
Bespoke Carpentry & Joinery in Dublin 4.
Feature walls, wardrobes, kitchens and panelling — drawn, made and fitted in-house. Run in-house by Marcin's team across Dublin 4 and the wider Dublin area.
Dublin 4 · The area
Why bespoke carpentry and joinery in Dublin 4 are a familiar brief.
Dublin 4 joinery work runs at the highest spec spectrum in Dublin. The Victorian and Edwardian period stock in Donnybrook, Sandymount and Ailesbury carries deep period joinery throughout: 6-inch or deeper skirting with multiple moulding stages, moulded architraves with carved outer stops, picture rails on principal rooms, original shutters retained, ceiling roses on formal layouts, original panelled doors. New joinery matches existing profiles exactly, taken off on site and run through a Dublin workshop to replicate. Fitted wardrobes are designed to read as room-built. Feature work uses period-respecting picture-frame panelling, shaker-door media units, alcove cabinetry, and book-matched walnut or oak veneer on the larger feature pieces. Walk-in dressing-room joinery in the principal bedroom is standard. Modern apartments and townhouses near the docklands follow the contemporary template instead. ACA and protected-structure context shapes what can be removed but rarely affects new joinery added.
Bespoke Carpentry & Joinery · How we run it
Bespoke Carpentry & Joinery in Dublin 4, the way it should be done.
Carpentry is the discipline this studio was built on. Twenty years on Irish sites means twenty years of fitting joinery into rooms that are never plumb, never square and never exactly the size of the drawing. We measure the room as built, draw the joinery to fit it exactly, and finish on site so the lines hit the architraves correctly every time.
The work spans the full range — slatted oak feature walls, picture-frame and fluted wall panelling, full-wall media units with shaker doors, fitted wardrobes with internal carcasses laid out for the way the client actually uses the wardrobe, bespoke kitchens with handleless fronts and stone or porcelain worktops, and engineered or solid timber floors laid the right way relative to the longest line of sight in the room.
Where the joinery sits next to plastering, tiling or electrics, we coordinate it ourselves — no waiting on someone else to come back to finish a reveal or hide a cable.
The work in Dublin 4 runs to the same specification we apply everywhere across Dublin and Leinster. Materials, sub-trade coordination, planning context and final certification are all managed from one studio. If your project is on the dublin side of the city, expect site visits within the working week and same-day responses on WhatsApp.
Carpentry in Dublin 4
Common questions about bespoke carpentry and joinery in Dublin 4.
Yes. Dublin 4 is a regular service area for us. Renovations, extensions and bespoke joinery across Dublin 4. From the Victorian and Edwardian red-brick terraces of Donnybrook and Sandymount through the period semis of Ballsbridge and Ailesbury, we cover the full D4 corridor. If your project sits in this area we will arrange a site visit, give you an honest indication of scope and timeline at the first meeting, and follow up with a written fixed-price quotation.
We use a network of trusted Dublin workshops for machining and spraying, then fit on site with our own carpenters. This is the standard for high-end fitted joinery in Dublin and means you get specialist spray-finishes alongside on-site adjustment.
Yes. We routinely match existing skirting, architrave, picture rail and dado profiles in Victorian, Edwardian and Georgian Dublin homes. We take a profile on site and the joinery is run to match exactly.
Sign-off to fitted is usually 3 to 4 weeks: 2 to 3 weeks in the workshop, then 2 to 4 days on site.
Also in Dublin 4
Other capabilities we run in Dublin 4.
Carpentry elsewhere
Bespoke Carpentry & Joinery in nearby areas.
Carpentry · Dublin 4
Planning bespoke carpentry and joinery in Dublin 4?
Same-day replies on WhatsApp. Calls and emails answered within one working day.

