Design Mistakes to Avoid

Design Mistakes to Avoid When Planning Built-Ins (And How Custom Solves Them)

Built-ins should make your life easier and your home more beautiful. But poor planning can turn a dream feature into a daily frustration. Here's how to avoid the most common mistakes — and why custom design prevents them in the first place.

At Refined Interiors, we design built-ins that anticipate how you'll actually use them — not just how they'll look on day one.

Built-in cabinetry transforms unused walls into functional storage and display space. But the details matter enormously. We've seen homeowners invest in beautiful built-ins only to discover — too late — that the design doesn't work for their real-world needs.

Here are the most common mistakes we see, and how thoughtful custom design prevents each one.


Mistake #1: Shallow Depth That Limits Function

One of the most common built-in failures is insufficient depth. What looks proportional in a drawing often proves frustrating in real life — books fall forward, equipment doesn't fit, and the whole unit feels cramped.

The Problem

Standard bookshelves are often only 10–11" deep. That works for paperbacks, but not for art books, binders, photo albums, or anything you actually want to display. Media equipment, board games, and decorative objects need more space.

The Custom Solution

We start by asking what you'll actually store. Different sections can have different depths — deeper lower cabinets for games and equipment, standard depth for books, shallower display shelves for collectibles. Form follows function.


Mistake #2: Poor Outlet and Wire Planning

Nothing ruins a beautiful built-in faster than visible cords, missing outlets, or the discovery that you can't plug in your TV, lamp, or charger where you need it.

Common complaints: "We didn't realize we'd need an outlet behind the TV." "There's no way to hide the router cords." "I can't charge my laptop on my desk without a visible power strip."

The Custom Solution

We plan electrical placement before construction begins. This includes outlets behind media areas, USB ports at desk height, ventilation for electronics, and wire management channels hidden within the cabinetry. For entertainment centers, this planning is essential.

Retrofit electrical work after built-ins are installed is expensive and often visually compromised. Plan it right the first time.


Mistake #3: Fixed Shelving Where Adjustable Is Needed

Fixed shelves look clean and architectural. But they're inflexible — and inflexibility becomes a problem the moment your storage needs change.

The Problem

Your book collection grows. You buy a new gaming console. Your kids' toys give way to teenagers' sports equipment. Fixed shelves can't adapt, leaving you with wasted vertical space or items that simply don't fit.

The Custom Solution

We use adjustable shelving systems that maintain a clean look while allowing flexibility. Shelf pin holes are discretely placed, and we can mix fixed structural shelves (where needed) with adjustable ones (where useful).


Mistake #4: Ignoring Future Use

Built-ins are permanent features. Designing only for today's needs — without considering how your life will change — leads to regret down the road.

Kids Grow Up

That playroom built-in designed for toy bins? In five years, it might need to be a homework station. Design with adaptability in mind.

Technology Changes

Today's 55" TV becomes tomorrow's 75" screen. Gaming consoles get replaced. Home office needs evolve. Build in flexibility for what's coming, not just what exists today.

Resale Matters

Highly personalized built-ins can limit buyer appeal. Thoughtful, adaptable design serves your needs now while remaining attractive to future owners.

Our approach: We design built-ins that serve you beautifully today while remaining flexible enough to adapt as your life changes.


Mistake #5: Forgetting About Lighting

Built-ins often end up in shadow. Without proper lighting, even beautifully crafted cabinetry loses its impact — and functional spaces become hard to use.

The Problem

Deep shelves create shadows. Glass-front cabinets look dark inside. Home offices lack task lighting. Display shelves don't highlight what they're displaying.

The Custom Solution

We incorporate lighting from the start — LED strips under shelves, puck lights in display areas, integrated task lighting for work surfaces. Wiring is hidden, switches are conveniently placed, and the result is dramatic.


Mistake #6: Prioritizing Looks Over Function

Pinterest-worthy built-ins sometimes fail the daily use test. Symmetry is beautiful, but not at the expense of practicality.

Real example: A homeowner wanted perfectly symmetrical bookshelves flanking their fireplace. Beautiful — but the TV ended up off-center, the sound bar didn't fit, and one side had dead storage space nobody could reach.

Custom design finds the balance. We create built-ins that photograph beautifully and function perfectly — because true craftsmanship serves both aesthetics and daily life.


Why Custom Design Prevents These Mistakes

The common thread in all these mistakes? They happen when built-ins are designed generically instead of thoughtfully.

  • Conversation first: We learn how you live before we design anything.
  • Future planning: We anticipate changes and build in flexibility.
  • Systems thinking: Electrical, lighting, and storage work together as an integrated whole.
  • Experience: We've seen what fails and know how to prevent it.

The best built-in is one you never have to think about — it just works, every day, exactly as you need it to.


Ready to Plan Your Built-Ins the Right Way?

Whether you're dreaming of a home office, entertainment center, or library wall, we'll help you avoid common pitfalls and create something that works beautifully for years to come.

Explore our built-in cabinetry or start a conversation about your project.

At Refined Interiors, every cabinet begins with craftsmanship — and every project ends with refinement.