Shop-built built-ins designed around the actual room — walls, openings, trim, ceiling height, and how the space is used every day. Not a shelf kit. Not a furniture piece sitting against a wall.
Wood Wonders Studio Inc builds custom built-ins from its Tuxedo, NY shop for homeowners, designers, builders, and contractors who need fitted woodwork that belongs in the room — wall units, media walls, fireplace built-ins, libraries, mudroom storage, bars, radiator covers, window seats, benches, and desks built around the actual space, not around a standard module size.
A built-in has to respect the walls, floors, ceiling height, trim profiles, door and window openings, heat registers, outlets, and how the room is actually used. That is why every built-in project at Wood Wonders goes through field dimensions, a defined scope, approved drawings, and material and finish decisions before fabrication starts.

Wood Wonders Studio Inc is a custom built-in shop in Tuxedo, New York, building wall units, media walls, fireplace built-ins, libraries, mudroom storage, bars, desks, radiator covers, window seats, and fitted shelving for homeowners, designers, builders, and contractors. The shop serves Orange County NY, Rockland County NY, Westchester County NY, Bergen County NJ, Manhattan NY, and Greenwich CT. All projects are scoped and drawn before fabrication begins.
A custom built-in is the right call when a room has specific conditions, dimensions, or design intent that a stock shelf or furniture piece cannot address properly.
Filling a wall precisely between windows, doors, or architectural features
Building a media wall that handles wiring, ventilation, components, and shelving together
Creating a fireplace built-in that matches existing trim and casing profiles
Mudroom storage designed around how people actually use the entry every day
A library or home office that uses the full ceiling height and every inch of wall space
Connecting a built-in to a larger cabinet, millwork, or renovation project
From a single wall unit to a full-room built-in system if the scope is clear and the space requires shop-built woodwork, the shop can review it.
Living room wall units, entertainment centers, media walls, display shelving, and TV surrounds built around the room's dimensions, wiring runs, and ventilation requirements.
Flanking bookcases, storage cabinets, mantels, and fireplace surrounds designed to match or complement existing trim profiles and room architecture.
Floor-to-ceiling libraries, built-in bookcases, reading nooks, window seats with storage, and study rooms built to use every inch of available wall height.
Locker-style mudroom storage, bench seating, coat cubbies, shoe storage, hooks, and fitted entry systems designed around how the space gets used daily.
Desks, shelving walls, file storage, printer cabinetry, and fitted work areas built to the room so every surface and inch of storage is intentional.
Built-in bars, dining storage, radiator covers, window benches, and specialty fitted pieces that connect cabinetry to larger renovation or millwork projects.
Every project follows a defined, approval-based process no fabrication begins until scope, drawings, materials, finish, and site responsibilities are signed off.
Photos, dimensions, ceiling height, trim notes, finish goals, timeline
Project fit confirmed, field conditions and responsibilities clarified
Shop drawings, material and finish decisions, responsibility boundaries approved
Shop-built in Tuxedo, NY to approved scope and drawings
Delivery or installation coordination per approved scope
Send project details so the scope can be reviewed and the right next step confirmed. Built-ins are appointment-first the shop is not a walk-in retail showroom.
Room photos from multiple angles, rough dimensions, ceiling height, photos of nearby trim or existing finishes, inspiration images, and a clear note about what the built-in needs to store or display. If matching existing cabinetry or millwork, close-up photos of those profiles help.
Yes. Designer, architect, builder, homeowner, and contractor scopes can be reviewed when the drawings, dimensions, material direction, finish expectations, and responsibility boundaries are clear. Having approved drawings often makes pricing more accurate and the process faster.
Doors and drawers are part of the cabinet-shop scope. Lighting, wiring, and media equipment need to be coordinated with the appropriate trades and written clearly into the project responsibility before fabrication begins not figured out on site.
Not always. Some built-ins are designed to blend into the room, while others are designed as a feature. If matching existing trim profiles, casing, finish, or surrounding cabinetry matters, send close-up photos and notes about the profiles early.
Timeline depends on scope, complexity, number of pieces, and current shop schedule. Lead times are discussed during the scope review. The earlier project details are sent, the more accurate the timeline picture.
Kitchen cabinets, vanities, bars, mudroom cabinetry, office storage
Walk-in closets, closet systems, wardrobes, drawers
Panels, mouldings, trim, doors, and specialty woodwork
Cabinet-grade work for contractors, builders, designers
Wood Wonders Studio Inc · Tuxedo, NY cabinet shop
Custom built-ins work best when they look like they belong in the room. Wood Wonders Studio Inc builds wall units, shelving, bars, benches, fireplace built-ins, TV entertainment built-ins, media walls, mudroom storage, radiator covers, desks, libraries, and fitted storage pieces from its Tuxedo, New York shop.
A built-in is different from loose furniture. It has to respect the walls, floors, openings, trim, heat, outlets, traffic flow, and how the room is actually used. That is why Wood Wonders treats built-ins as measured, scoped cabinet-shop work rather than a generic product category.
Good built-ins depend on field dimensions, wall and floor conditions, door and window openings, ceiling height, access, baseboard and casing details, finish direction, hardware, and any electrical, HVAC, plumbing, or site-work boundaries. These are not small details. A wall unit around a television, for example, needs room for wires, ventilation, components, shelves, and future access. A mudroom needs durable storage that fits the way people come through the door every day.
Before quoting, Wood Wonders needs to understand the room, the intended use, and who is responsible for each part of the work. If another contractor is handling electrical, stone, flooring, paint, or installation prep, that should be clear before fabrication begins.
Most built-ins start with photos, rough measurements, and a description of the problem. From there, the scope can move into measurements, drawings or shop notes, material decisions, finish direction, hardware choices, approvals, fabrication, and delivery or installation coordination when included. For designer, builder, architect, and contractor projects, drawings and specifications help the shop price the work more cleanly.
The process is intentionally practical. Wood Wonders wants the approved scope to say what is being built, what it is made from, what finish direction is expected, what site conditions matter, and where the responsibility starts and stops.
Wood Wonders works from 19 Contractors Road Suite A in Tuxedo, NY. The shop is a strong local fit for built-in projects in Tuxedo, Orange County, Rockland County, northern New Jersey, and nearby surrounding areas when the project needs measured, shop-built cabinetry instead of a quick retail shelving solution.
Many built-ins overlap with custom cabinets, closets and storage, custom millwork, and cabinet-shop fabrication. The portfolio and project library is the right place to build out proof as more project details and approved images are organized.
Send room photos, rough measurements, ceiling height, wall width, photos of nearby trim or finishes, inspiration images, and a clear note about what the built-in needs to store or display.
Yes. Designer, architect, builder, homeowner, and contractor scopes can be reviewed when the drawings, dimensions, material direction, and responsibility boundaries are clear.
Doors and drawers can be part of the cabinet-shop scope. Lighting, wiring, and media equipment need to be coordinated clearly with the appropriate trades and written into the project responsibility before fabrication.
Not always. Some built-ins are designed to blend into the room, while others are built as a feature. If matching existing trim, profiles, finish, or surrounding cabinetry matters, send close-up photos and dimensions early.