Floor to Ceiling Wardrobe Design

Floor-to-ceiling wardrobes use the full room height, eliminating gaps, wasted space, and dust-prone areas.

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Key Information at a Glance

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a floor to ceiling wardrobe?

It’s a wardrobe that goes all the way, from the floor to the ceiling, no gap at the top, nothing left unused. Unlike a standard wardrobe that stops at a fixed height, this uses the full vertical height of the room. More storage, a cleaner look, and nothing awkward sitting above it collecting dust.

Storage is the obvious one; you get significantly more of it without touching any extra floor space. But there’s more to it. The room feels finished. No odd gap between the top of the unit and the ceiling, no exposed surface to worry about. It looks intentional, almost architectural, in a way a standard wardrobe never quite does.

Honestly, small bedrooms are where it makes the most sense. Floor space is limited, so you go vertical instead. Same wall footprint, far more storage. And done right, a lighter finish, maybe a mirror panel, the room actually feels taller rather than more cramped. The practical choice and the design choice happen to be the same thing here.

Quite a wide range. On the cleaner, minimal side, there’s Classic, Linea, and the F2C series. For something more detailed, Gloria, Monza, Fumo, and the Fluted designs bring in more character. Glass sliding variants are in there, too. Every design can be customised in finish, internal layout, and size, so what you see in the gallery is a starting point, not a fixed product.



That’s the whole point of going modular. Spacewood builds wardrobes to your exact room height, width, and depth, no standard sizes, no awkward fillers. The internal layout is also planned around your storage needs. How much hanging space, how many shelves, where the drawers go, all decided based on what you actually need, not a template.



Both hinged and sliding. Sliding works better when the bedroom doesn’t have much clearance in front, no swing space needed. Hinged gives you full access to the interior in one open. Glass shutters are available too, and work particularly well at full height because the scale makes them feel substantial rather than decorative.

Membrane, acrylic, polymer, lacquer, PU paint, laminate, glass, the full range. Fluted panels are part of the mix, too, for a more textured, design-forward look. The finish changes the feel of the wardrobe completely. Matte wood texture reads warm. High-gloss acrylic or lacquer is sharper and more contemporary. Worth spending time on this, it’s the largest piece of furniture in most bedrooms.

Carpentry is built on-site; quality depends on the carpenter and the supervision on that day. A modular wardrobe is factory-made in controlled conditions, assembled in your room, and uses precision fittings throughout. Finish is more consistent, hardware is better, and if you ever move homes, it can come with you. Site carpentry stays behind.

Only if it’s planned badly. A well-designed full-height wardrobe that spans a wall reads as part of the room, not furniture placed against it. Lighter finishes, mirrors, or glass panels open the space up. What makes rooms feel small is wrong proportions and wrong finishes; that’s exactly what the planning process is there to avoid.


Visit a Spacewood showroom; seeing the designs in person makes a big difference. The design team will work with your room measurements, storage needs, and finish preferences to put something together that actually fits. Contact us for more information or call us on +91 95455-58856 to speak with the team directly.