
October 2021
A warm neutral colour scheme for the main cabinetry is complemented with a darker toned kitchen island. The kitchen is accessorised with brass details - the brass handles, tap and inlays work beautifully against the warm neutral colour of the cabinets and add to the overall feminine look and feel. The bespoke fitted larder makes a fabulous kitchen addition, with custom plywood door mounted spice racks, multiple shelves and plenty of room to store the toaster, breadbin and coffee maker. The wall of tall cabinets offer plenty of storage with pull out larder units and their neutral colour means they blend perfectly into the wall and not dominate the room. All units are constructed from solid plywood, custom sized with bespoke detailing throughout. Cabinets vary in depth to fit around the chimney breast, existing fridge freezer and room geometry. The doors are custom sprayed to match the chosen colour palette blending seamlessly with the interior wall paint. Light and airy, this beautiful painted kitchen creates a striking focal point and is just waiting to be used to entertain in.
"Future Joinery were with us every step of the way holding our hands and advising us with every aspect of the kitchen. They kept us updated with costs throughout. Rob being a architect together with his team not only provided advice, practical solutions but also have such an aesthetic eye which I don’t feel you always get with our kitchen companies. We have ended up with a completely bespoke kitchen that fits perfectly into our old house and at competitive price. Thank you Rob, Gemma and all the team. The team not only fulfilled our brief but increased it two fold. Thank you it’s a joy every-time I walk into my beautiful kitchen."













This loft bed was designed as a highly specific response to the spatial and heritage constraints of a Grade II* listed Methodist chapel, recently converted into a private home. The client wanted to introduce a guest sleeping space, but subdivision of the main volume was not permitted as part of the approved conversion. The solution had to be inventive, functional, and visually appropriate to the character of the historic building.

This spiral staircase forms a focal element of a new home within a sympathetically converted Grade II* listed Methodist chapel, originally built in 1752. A key condition of this reuse was the retention of the chapel’s triple-height volume, requiring any new intervention to be respectful of the historic fabric and the original plan form. The new stair rises from an existing mezzanine into a newly habitable roof space, threading a precise path past original timber beams, preserving headroom and access routes of the existing mezzanine while aligning with the upper floor geometry.

Bespoke cabinetry is finished in ultra matte soft touch Fenix laminate with touches of oak veneer. Overall, this project integrates a calm, functional design language, creating light and space throughout.

These integrated wardrobes feature an ultra-matte, soft-touch Fenix laminate finish. The clean lines and seamless transitions highlight the precision of our joinery work, where every detail supports the home’s minimalist aesthetic. FENIX® Bianco Malé completes the look with its subtle, off-white hue - keeping things light and modern.