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Custom Cabinets in Saint Paul

Custom and restored cabinetry for Saint Paul homes since 1983. Period-matched butler's pantries, paneled libraries, mahogany built-ins, primary closets, mudrooms, and basement bars — built and finished in our Twin Cities shop.

Saint Paul houses set the bar — your new cabinetry has to live alongside the original

A century ago Saint Paul builders treated cabinetry as architecture. Carved newel posts, paneled wainscot, mahogany library walls, leaded-glass butler's pantries, dining-room china cabinets with curved-glass doors. A lot of that original work is still standing in Highland Park, Mac-Groveland, Summit Hill, and Crocus Hill — beautifully detailed, often in rooms that no longer match modern life. Custom cabinetry in Saint Paul is therefore a two-part discipline: respecting and often restoring what is already there, and building new pieces that read as if they have always been part of the house. Catalog cabinetry rarely meets that bar. Custom does.

  • Restoration of original Saint Paul built-ins — refinishing, hardware, structural repair

  • Period-matched companion cabinetry — millwork that reads as original

  • Mudroom, entry, and back-stair built-ins for daily-use storage

  • Paneled libraries, studies, and home offices in mahogany, oak, or walnut

  • Primary-suite closet built-ins coordinated with the bathroom

  • Basement bars, wine cellars, and entertainment built-ins

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Custom Cabinets in Saint Paul

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Custom Cabinets in Saint Paul

Saint Paul cabinetry projects fall into one of three buckets. Some are pure new construction — a primary-closet build-out, a basement bar, a mudroom — where there is no original cabinetry to consider. Some are pure restoration — a butler’s pantry that needs refinishing and structural repair without losing its character. Most are a mix — restoring the original library and adding companion cabinetry in a new home office across the hall, or keeping the dining-room china cabinet and matching its detail in a new kitchen. We do all three and discuss which fits your project at the first walk-through.

What we build for Saint Paul homes

  • Restoration of original built-ins — Saint Paul-specific specialty. Where the original cabinetry is salvageable (butler’s pantries, library shelving, dining-room china cabinets, hall benches) we refinish, replace failing hinges and pulls, and address structural issues without losing the original character.
  • Period-matched companion cabinetry — when restoration is not enough, we mill and finish new pieces to match the existing detail so old and new read as one cohesive piece.
  • Mudroom and back-entry built-ins — bench, cubbies, hooks, closed storage, sometimes a half bath. The classic Saint Paul mudroom turns a side-door entry into the room the family actually uses.
  • Library and home-office paneling — full-wall built-in shelving, paneled wainscot, integrated desks, sometimes a paneled accent wall. Mahogany, white oak, walnut. Common request in Highland Park and Summit Hill.
  • Primary-suite closet cabinetry — drawer banks, double-hang and long-hang zones, shoe shelves, sometimes a center island. Coordinated with the primary bath in matching finish and hardware.
  • Basement bars, wine cellars, theater built-ins — wet bar with refrigeration; climate-controlled wine cellars with custom racking; media walls. Common scope on Highland Park walkout-basement projects.
  • Window seats and dormer-cheek built-ins — under windows, in bay nooks, in attic-conversion dormer cheeks. Storage plus seating in spaces that would otherwise sit empty.

Cabinetry as part of the architecture

The defining cabinetry challenge in older Saint Paul homes is that the original work is good. A 1925 Highland Park library has hand-carved corbels, fluted pilasters, and quarter-sawn oak panels with figured grain that nobody mills the same way today. A 1910 Summit Hill butler’s pantry has leaded glass that was custom-leaded for that house. Modern catalog cabinetry next to that original detail looks immediately wrong — the proportions are off, the wood reads flat, the casework reads thin.

Our shop spends real time on profile matching. The casing across the room from the new cabinetry gets measured, and we mill rails and stiles to the same width-to-thickness ratios. Door styles match the existing work — a bungalow-era five-piece door, a colonial raised-panel, a Tudor arched-panel. Hardware is selected from our samples to read as period-appropriate (unlacquered brass, polished nickel, oil-rubbed bronze, never the contemporary matte black on a 1920s home unless the intent is intentionally a contrast). The result is cabinetry that looks like it was always there — which is the same reaction we want when a guest walks into the room.

Restoration scope versus replacement scope

Saint Paul homeowners often ask whether we are going to keep the existing built-ins or tear them out. The honest answer is that it depends on the condition of the original work and the overall direction of the rest of the project. Where the original is intact and structurally sound, we restore — that is a refinish, hardware replacement, sometimes glass replacement, sometimes minor carpentry repair. Where the original has been compromised by previous renovations (cabinet doors lost, original hardware replaced with modern, panels removed for built-in appliances), we evaluate whether restoration is realistic or whether a replacement that matches the original style is the better path. We do not gut original cabinetry without a clear reason — original Saint Paul built-ins carry real value that does not get replaced by anything new.

Cabinetry budget ranges in Saint Paul

Saint Paul custom cabinetry budgets vary by application, scope, and finish. As a working guide: a mudroom built-in package (bench, cubbies, hooks, closed cabinets, full wall) runs $10,500 to $27,000. A library or home-office build-out (full wall of shelves, integrated desk, file storage, sometimes paneled wainscot) runs $13,000 to $38,000. A primary-closet built-in package for a walk-in primary closet runs $15,000 to $35,000. A basement bar or media built-in runs $13,000 to $42,000. Restoration of an existing butler’s pantry, library, or built-in china cabinet typically runs $7,000 to $32,000 depending on scope and finish complexity. A full whole-house cabinetry package on a Saint Paul whole-home remodel typically lands between $105,000 and $295,000+.

Schedule for Saint Paul cabinetry

Standalone cabinetry projects (mudroom, library, primary closet) typically run three to six months from contract to install. Restoration scope often runs faster on the front end (less planning time) but slower on finishing if the original work needs special handling. Whole-house cabinetry runs alongside the broader remodel schedule with multiple shop fabrication waves over the project. We give you a fabrication and install schedule at contract and update it monthly.

Schedule a Saint Paul cabinetry visit

Set up a consultation and we will walk through the room, look at the original work, talk through restoration versus new-build options, and propose a scope and finish direction in person. The first meeting ends with a clear path you can decide on and a budget range you can plan around.

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Common Questions

Saint Paul cabinetry FAQ

Knutson is a remodeling firm that runs its own cabinetry shop. The same team that plans the room mills the doors, sprays the finish, and scribes the install. There is no outside cabinet shop in the chain, no separate finisher, no installer who has never seen the elevation. For old Saint Paul houses with out-of-plumb plaster walls and 100-year-old trim profiles, that single-team chain is what produces an install that disappears into the architecture instead of sitting against it. Our custom cabinetry shows up in kitchens, bathrooms, libraries, primary closets, mudrooms, and basements throughout Saint Paul.

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  • Almost always restore where the original is salvageable. Saint Paul built-ins from the 1900s through 1930s are usually structurally sound, and the design value of the original work cannot be replicated by new construction. Replace when the original has been compromised beyond practical repair, or when the room's function has changed enough that the existing piece no longer fits.
  • Usually yes for species (we mill in mahogany, white oak, quarter-sawn oak, cherry, walnut, maple, alder, painted poplar) and very close on finish, with the caveat that an 80-year patina cannot be perfectly replicated on new wood — we get within a few shades and the boundary becomes invisible after a few years.
  • Leaded glass we source from a Twin Cities specialty supplier we have used for years. Original-era hardware (unlacquered brass, milk glass, mortise locks) we source from the few suppliers who still make it. Where the original hardware is irreplaceable but recoverable, we restore.
  • Yes. Mahogany libraries are more common in Saint Paul than anywhere else in the Twin Cities, especially in Highland Park, Mac-Groveland, and Summit Hill. We mill, fit, and finish mahogany the way it was originally specified.
  • We measure existing casing, baseboard, and crown profiles with a profile gauge, then mill to those exact dimensions. The new cabinetry door rails, stiles, and trim get sized to read consistent with the existing room.
  • Plaster walls in older Saint Paul homes are not plumb and not flat. Our boxes are built smaller than the rough opening, then scribed to the actual wall by our carpenters with custom-cut filler strips that disappear into the trim. This is the difference between cabinetry that looks like it belongs and cabinetry that looks dropped in.
  • Blum or Hettich hinges and drawer slides as standard, with full extension and soft-close on every drawer. Decorative hardware (knobs and pulls) is selected from showroom samples to match the period and design direction of the room.
  • Yes. Mid-century cabinetry in Highland Park and Battle Creek ramblers and the few mid-century homes in Mac-Groveland often has rift-sawn or quarter-sawn paneling, slab door fronts, and integrated lighting that is worth keeping. We restore where appropriate and build companion contemporary pieces where new scope is required.

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Forty-three years in one market means we know the housing stock house by house — the bungalow framing in south Minneapolis, the brick colonials of Highland Park, the mid-century ramblers of Edina, the custom 1990s two-stories of Eden Prairie. We construct high end, quality, sutainable homes in the city you live in.

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