Walk-In Closet Design: Maximizing Every Inch of Your Calgary Master Suite

March 25, 2026

A well-designed walk-in closet transforms your morning routine. Instead of searching through crowded rods and overflowing drawers, everything has a place. You can see your entire wardrobe at a glance.

Start With Your Wardrobe Assessment

Before designing storage, understand what you’re storing:

Hanging items: How many long items (dresses, coats) need full-height hanging? How many short items can use double-hung rods?

Folded items: Sweaters, jeans, t-shirts — how much drawer and shelf space do you need?

Shoes: Count them. Be honest. Most people underestimate.

Accessories: Belts, ties, scarves, jewelry — these need specialized storage.

Bags and luggage: Don’t forget these larger items.

Zone Planning for Couples

His and hers sides: The classic approach — each person gets a wall or section.

By category: All hanging items in one area, all drawers in another, regardless of ownership.

Seasonal rotation: Primary real estate for current-season items, harder-to-reach areas for off-season.

Double-Hanging vs. Long-Hanging

Double-hung sections (two rods stacked vertically) work for shirts, blazers, folded pants — anything under 40 inches. You effectively double your hanging capacity.

Long-hanging sections (full-height single rod) are necessary for dresses, long coats, and robes. Most people need less long-hanging space than they think.

A common mistake: making the entire closet long-hanging because it looks elegant. The result? Wasted vertical space.

Drawer Systems and Accessories

Shallow drawers (4-6 inches): Perfect for socks, underwear, accessories, jewelry

Medium drawers (8-10 inches): Ideal for folded shirts, sweaters

Deep drawers (12+ inches): Best for bulky items like sweaters, jeans

Drawer dividers transform a basic drawer into an organizing system.

Lighting Makes the Difference

Natural light: If your closet has or can have a window, prioritize it.

LED closet rods: Integrated lighting in the hanging rods illuminates clothing directly.

Under-shelf lighting: LED strips under shelves illuminate the items below.

Motion activation: Lights that turn on when you enter and off when you leave.

Choose 4000K color temperature for accurate color representation.

Island Dressers for Larger Walk-Ins

If your walk-in is large enough (typically 10×10 feet or more), a center island adds significant storage and functionality.

Islands provide drawer storage accessible from both sides, a surface for packing or laying out outfits, and a focal point that elevates the space.

Reach-In Closets: Same Principles, Smaller Scale

  • Maximize double-hanging for short items
  • Use the full height with upper shelving
  • Include drawers (either built-in or freestanding)
  • Add door-mounted organizers for accessories
  • Install proper lighting

Ready to Start Your Project?

Whether you’re planning a kitchen renovation ($18,000-$24,000 typical), outfitting a new office, or developing a multi-family project, we’d love to discuss how Planar Millwork can help.

Contact us for a free consultation and detailed quote.