Project · 2026 · Olympia DUMBO, Brooklyn

The Olympia Built-In

Olympia DUMBO — Hill West Architects' sail-shaped tower on the Brooklyn waterfront

Olympia DUMBO, Hill West Architects' sail-shaped tower on the Brooklyn waterfront. The work lives on the interior. The building is the address.

The wardrobe wall — door open, room beyond

The brief

A wardrobe, a desk, and a quiet place to put things down. Built into a single wall, in a tower designed to be looked at.

For a private residence inside Olympia DUMBO, Hill West Architects’ sail‑shaped tower on the Brooklyn waterfront.

Two tall wardrobes, a stack of drawers, a vertical bookshelf niche, and a rift‑oak desk that turns into the corner under floating oak shelves. White painted cabinetry edge to edge, baseboard to ceiling. No hardware shows. From across the room it reads as a calm painted wall. Step closer and the wall starts to make sense.

Year2026
LocationDUMBO, Brooklyn
ProgramWardrobe · desk · shelving
MaterialsWhite-painted MDF · rift white oak · maple
HardwareRecessed reveals · soft-close · push-to-open
RunFloor-to-ceiling · wall-to-wall
BuiltBrooklyn shop, installed on site
Wardrobe doors open — the full system revealed

Every door open. The wardrobe, the niche, the drawers. The full system at once.

01 · The room

The built-in, all doors closed — a calm painted wall
The same wall with every door and drawer open, revealing the full storage system

02 · The system

Closed, it’s a wall. Open, it’s a house.

Two tall wardrobes for hanging. A stack of deep drawers in between, the bottom three deep enough for folded sweaters, the top two shallow for the small things. A vertical bookshelf niche on the far end. The desk turning into the corner with oak shelves floating above it. Behind every painted face: white melamine carcass, adjustable solid shelves, soft‑close runners, pencil‑edge interiors.

The curved oak edge where the desk meets the painted carcass

03 · The curve

Where oak becomes wall.

The desktop is rift‑sawn white oak, chosen one board at a time for the straightness of its line. Where the top rolls down to meet the painted face of the cabinet, we cut a soft, hand‑shaped curve through solid oak edge‑banded to the surface, then sanded the joint until the line read as continuous wood.

The hard part isn’t making the curve. The hard part is making the curve sit a quarter inch beneath the painted face, so the oak appears to dip behind it, like one material slipping under another.

04 · Inside the desk

The drawer keeps its own counsel.

Pull the desk drawer all the way out and the rule we work by becomes visible: the inside is finished as carefully as the outside. Hard maple sides, through‑dovetailed at every corner. A maple drawer bottom that floats in dadoes, never glued or pinned, so it can move with the season.

A single maple divider, oriented across the run, marks two compartments. Pens on one side. Everything else on the other.

The desk drawer pulled out — maple sides, dovetailed corners, maple bottom, single divider
Recessed shadow lines between painted doors and drawer fronts
The built-in from the apartment beyond — closed wall, all seams visible

05 · The reveals

No hardware. Every door knows where to open from.

Every door and drawer opens on a recessed shadow line: a 6 mm finger reveal cut into the back of the panel face. The painted finish is acrylic‑cured, three coats, hand‑rubbed between each. Seam tolerances at 1.5 mm on the doors, 2 mm at the drawer fronts. Tight enough to feel intentional. Loose enough to swing for years.

Floating corner — painted carcass meeting oak top
Oak shelves above the desk corner

Four small problems, four quiet answers. The wall is made of these.

06 · Details

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