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Custom Mudroom Built-Ins: Designing a Room That Actually Works

A practical guide to custom mudroom built-ins, covering lockers, bench height, storage zones, durable materials, and the details that keep clutter contained.

MÉTODO Arquitectos · 9 de junio de 2026 · 5 min de lectura

MÉTODO · CDMX × Denver

Arquitectura de autor: proceso antes que estilo

Residencial · pabellones · interiorismo en piedra, madera y concreto

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Custom Mudroom Built-Ins: Designing a Room That Actually Works

Custom Mudroom Built-Ins: Designing a Room That Actually Works

A mudroom is the hardest-working room in a house, and the one most often built from generic cabinets that ignore how the space is really used. Custom built-ins solve that by mapping storage to the household: a place for every coat, bag, shoe, and seasonal item. Here is how to design mudroom built-ins that keep a busy entry under control.

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Plan storage by zone, not by cabinet

Start with what the room has to hold and assign each item a home:

  • Daily landing zone: hooks or open cubbies at the height each person can reach, for coats and bags in constant use.
  • Shoe storage: open or vented shelving near the floor, since closed boxes trap dirt and odor.
  • Seasonal storage: closed upper cabinets for items used a few times a year.
  • Drop zone: a small counter or shelf with a drawer for keys, mail, and chargers.

Designing by zone is what separates a custom mudroom from a wall of identical lockers.

Get the bench and locker dimensions right

  • Bench height: 17 to 19 inches, deep enough to actually sit and remove boots.
  • Bench storage: flip-up lids or open cubbies below, sized to shoes or baskets.
  • Locker width: 12 to 18 inches per person depending on what hangs there.
  • Hook height: stagger hooks by user so children and adults each have reachable spots.

A custom shop can size individual lockers per family member rather than forcing one width on everyone.

Choose materials for abuse

A mudroom sees wet boots, dropped bags, and constant traffic, so the materials have to be tough:

  • Durable, wipeable finishes rather than delicate flat paints.
  • Solid hardwood or quality plywood for the structure, not thin particleboard that swells when wet.
  • Easy-clean surfaces on benches and lower cabinets where dirt collects.

Finishing the casework in a controlled shop, as a millwork shop like Vertical Custom Supply does, produces a harder, more cleanable surface than painting on site.

Detail the parts that get used daily

  • Soft-close hardware so doors and drawers survive years of hurried use.
  • Removable, washable cushions on the bench.
  • A few power outlets in the drop zone for charging.
  • Baskets or bins sized into the cubbies so loose items have a container.

Tie it into the architecture

The best mudrooms do not look like a furniture store rolled in a unit. Matching the trim, the bench profile, and the cabinet style to the rest of the house makes the built-ins feel original to the space. This is where coordinating with the home's design language, the kind of thinking firms like MÉTODO Arquitectos bring, keeps a utilitarian room consistent with the rest of the interior.

Closing

Custom mudroom built-ins work when they are designed around the household rather than around standard cabinet sizes. Map the storage by zone, get the bench and locker dimensions right, choose materials that survive daily abuse, and detail the small conveniences that keep clutter contained. The payoff is an entry that organizes itself.

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MÉTODO diseña residencias de autor, pabellones culturales e interiores en piedra, madera y concreto, entre Ciudad de México y Denver. Cuatro proyectos al año, por elección.

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