
Walk-in wardrobe
A dedicated room-within-a-room with open shelving, hanging sections, and an optional central island or seating. The ultimate wardrobe experience for large bedrooms.
Wardrobe designs
Real wardrobe designs built by ModuCrafts in Ghaziabad bedrooms — not catalogue renders. Pick a layout, then we design around your room dimensions, your wardrobe inventory and your finish preferences.

Layouts

A dedicated room-within-a-room with open shelving, hanging sections, and an optional central island or seating. The ultimate wardrobe experience for large bedrooms.

A single run of floor-to-ceiling cabinetry with continuous shutters. The most common wardrobe format — works in any bedroom size and delivers a clean, uncluttered wall.

Wardrobe units flank a central open section housing a study desk, display shelves, or dressing table. Maximises wall use while creating a functional multi-purpose zone in the bedroom.

Cabinetry along two adjacent walls — maximises storage in bedrooms with an awkward corner or where a single wall isn't long enough. The corner is handled with a dedicated tower unit.
Design notes
Best for bedrooms tighter than 11 ft on the wardrobe wall — no door swing, no wasted clearance. Mirror or laminate panels in 2 to 4 sliding tracks. Glide hardware from Hettich, Häfele or Godrej. Best with internal LED so the cabinet lights up as you slide.
Better for full access to the entire cabinet at once. Floor-to-ceiling shutters in laminate, acrylic, PU or veneer. Soft-close hinges from Blum or Hettich. Most cost-effective for 6 to 12 ft wardrobe runs.
For master bedrooms 14 ft and wider, or as a converted small bedroom. U-shape or parallel cabinet runs with a central island, dressing table, or settee. Open shelves, glass dust boxes, drawer towers and hanging rods configured to your wardrobe inventory.
Uses two adjacent walls for a corner footprint that doubles storage in a small bedroom. Loft section above for seasonal storage. The corner module is the trickiest part — done well it's seamless, done poorly it's dead space.
FAQ
Sliding is better when bedroom floor space is tight and you can't afford the swing radius of hinged shutters. Hinged is better when you have the floor space because you can open the entire wardrobe at once. For most Indian master bedrooms (12 ft and wider), hinged is more practical and 15 to 25 percent cheaper. For compact second bedrooms, sliding is often the right answer.