
Freestanding pieces, hand-made
Modular & Freestanding Kitchens
Freestanding kitchen furniture is not a compromise when it is made properly. Islands, dressers, larder cupboards, sink stands and prep tables can be built as complete pieces of furniture, giving older houses and character rooms a softer, more collected feel.
Freestanding furniture, made as proper joinery
A modular kitchen suits rooms where fixed runs would feel too heavy, where listed fabric needs to be respected, or where the client wants the kitchen to feel more like furniture than installation. The pieces can be made to stand apart from the walls, sit lightly against uneven plaster, or combine with one fitted run where storage density is needed.
Every piece is still drawn and made in the workshop. Drawer boxes, feet, plinths, panel mouldings, worktops and ironmongery are considered in the same way as a fully fitted bespoke kitchen.

Islands and prep tables
Freestanding islands can be designed with drawers, shelves, stone, timber or end-grain surfaces depending on how the room is used.

Mixing fitted and freestanding
Many rooms work best with one practical fitted wall and several furniture pieces that soften the scheme.

Made as objects
Each module is proportioned as a piece in its own right, with proper drawers, hardware, feet and finishing.
For listed and character houses
Freestanding furniture can suit rooms where walls are uneven, floors are old, or the architecture should remain more visible.
Designed to evolve
Some pieces can be added later or moved in the future, provided plumbing, stone and appliance requirements are planned carefully.
Freestanding pieces with proper furniture weight

Furniture-led kitchens
Islands, dressers and larder cupboards can be designed as individual pieces with proper scale and detail.

Movable centrepieces
A freestanding island can anchor the room without making older walls and floors feel over-fitted.

Oak and painted finishes
Oak, painted tulipwood, stone and timber worktops can be combined piece by piece.
Commissioning a modular kitchen
The brief usually starts with the key pieces: an island, dresser, larder, sink stand, plate rack or prep table. We then decide which elements should be fixed, which should stand free, and how the kitchen connects to pantry, utility or dining spaces.
Where a client wants the warmth of a collected country kitchen without losing the discipline of bespoke joinery, this approach can be very strong.
Frequently asked questions
Can freestanding pieces move between homes?
Many can, although anything with plumbing, electrics, stone or heavy appliances needs careful planning.
Can fitted and freestanding cabinetry be mixed?
Yes. A fitted sink wall with a freestanding island or dresser is often the best balance.
Is each piece made to measure?
Yes. The point is not a standard module; it is a piece designed to suit the room and the way it will be used.
Can I commission a single dresser or larder?
Yes. A single freestanding piece is a normal commission where the design and making justify a bespoke approach.
Freestanding kitchens for old rooms and changing homes
Freestanding furniture can be a better answer than fitted cabinetry when a room has strong character, uneven walls, listed fabric or a client who wants pieces that feel collected rather than installed. It is not a cheaper or simpler route when made properly; each piece still needs to be drawn, proportioned and built as furniture.
An island might be designed as a working table with drawers and a stone top. A dresser might hold crockery, glassware and serving pieces. A larder cupboard might stand as a single tall piece against an old wall. The value is that each item can have its own presence while still serving the kitchen as a whole.
This approach can also work alongside a fitted run, giving the room storage and services where required while keeping the overall feeling softer and more furniture-led.
Listed buildings often suit it
Freestanding pieces can reduce the need to fix cabinetry hard into sensitive walls, subject to the services required.
Each piece has a job
Dressers, larders, prep tables and sink stands should be useful, not decorative props.
Moving later is possible
Some pieces can be designed with future relocation in mind, although plumbing, stone and appliances need careful planning.
Finishes can be mixed
Painted timber, oak, walnut, stone and butcher block can be combined piece by piece without losing coherence.
Local kitchen work, national joinery standards
For bespoke kitchens our main local focus is Suffolk, Essex, Norfolk and Cambridgeshire, but Reeve & Co also fits high-end kitchens and fitted furniture nationally. We are regularly working in London on residential joinery projects, so the workshop is used to delivering the same level of detail for townhouses, country homes, apartments and larger private houses well beyond East Anglia.
Have a modular kitchen in mind?
Tell us whether you need a single piece, a freestanding run or a kitchen that mixes fitted and movable furniture.
