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Free 4 door wardrobe CAD block in DWG in 2026

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By Sumana Kumar · Published 25 Oct 2024 · Updated 23 Feb 2026

A four-door wardrobe is the standard run for a full master bedroom, giving two paired bays of hanging and shelf storage along a single wall. A correctly scaled 4 door wardrobe CAD block lets you set out that run and confirm it fits the wall and the door swings before you commit a single line of joinery. This page offers a free four-door wardrobe block in DWG, drawn in plan view at true millimetre dimensions and ready for AutoCAD 2004 or later. It is free for personal and commercial use, with no signup and no watermark.

Reach for this block when a room can dedicate most of one wall to storage. Four leaves give a couple realistic hanging space, and because the block is drawn to scale you can check the run against the wall length, the door reveal and the bed position the moment it lands on the plan.

What a 4 door wardrobe block represents

The block shows a four-bay cupboard from above: a long carcass rectangle split into four door leaves, usually as two pairs, with swing arcs or open-direction lines for each leaf. In plan the swing arcs matter most, because four hinged leaves open into the room and the combined clearance strip can be significant.

A four-door unit reads as a single long storage object even though it is built as two double bays. You move, copy and rotate it as one block reference, which keeps the plan tidy. It is the default choice when the room is big enough that a two- or three-door unit would look under-scaled against the wall.

Views and what's included

The download ships in plan view — the view you use to set out bedrooms and check circulation. The plan carries the carcass outline, the four door leaves and their swing indication so you can place the run, mirror it end-for-end, and test clearances against the bed and the room door.

Keep the block on a furniture layer so it coordinates with the bed, side tables and dressing table. For a joinery elevation showing the four fronts face-on, draw that separately on an elevation layer; this plan block is for laying out the room rather than for the cabinet-maker's drawing.

Typical 4 door wardrobe sizing

Use these as planning ranges, not fixed specs. A four-door hinged wardrobe is commonly around 1800–2200 mm wide, since four leaves of roughly 450–550 mm each add up to that span. Depth is usually 550–650 mm to clear a front-to-back hanging rail. Height follows the ceiling and does not show in plan.

Keep clear floor in front of the run for the doors. Hinged leaves typically need 450–600 mm of swing clearance, and across a four-leaf run that strip can be long, so make sure the bed or walkway does not foul it. With the scaled block placed, those checks are visual rather than arithmetic.

How to insert and place the block

The block is drawn full size in millimetres. Insert at scale 1 in a millimetre drawing, 0.001 in a metre template, or set INSUNITS to millimetres so AutoCAD rescales automatically. Use INSERT or drag the DWG from a tool palette, snap the insertion point to a back corner so the run sits flush to the wall, and rotate to suit.

Move the placed block onto a furniture layer. If the doors swing into the bed, mirror the block about its centreline. If the wall is a little longer or shorter than the standard run, stretch the carcass with grips, keeping the four leaves sensibly sized — or, for a bigger change, switch to the five- or six-door unit from the same family.

Where four-door wardrobes are used

Four-door runs are the staple of full-size master bedrooms in houses and larger apartments, principal suites in hotels, and main bedrooms in serviced and rental units. They give two people enough hanging and shelf space without resorting to a walk-in, which is why they appear in most residential drawing sets.

Pair the block with the bed, bedside-table and dressing-table blocks in the furniture category to complete a master bedroom. Where the wall is shorter, step down to a three- or two-door unit; where it is longer, move up to a five- or six-door run. Drawing the whole family from one block style keeps the plan coherent across every bedroom in a scheme.

Layering and scheduling

Keep the wardrobe on a dedicated furniture layer rather than layer 0 so storage can be frozen and thawed independently of the shell. A distinct colour and lineweight for furniture lets you issue both a clean structural plan and a furnished plan from one drawing, and the swing arcs can sit on a lighter sub-layer for presentation sheets.

Tag the run as a block with a type attribute so a furniture schedule can be extracted directly from the drawing — useful when a fit-out needs a count of storage units per room. When a standard master is finalised, WBLOCK the bed-plus-wardrobe arrangement as a single reusable unit so the room can be repeated across a multi-unit project without redrawing the storage.

Hinged or sliding for a four-door run

Across an 1800–2200 mm run, the choice between hinged and sliding doors has real consequences for the room. Four hinged leaves produce four swing arcs and a clearance strip that can be 450–600 mm deep along the whole front — a meaningful slice of a bedroom floor. Sliding doors over the same span need no swing room, which is why they are so common on full master runs where the bed sits opposite.

The plan block makes the trade-off explicit. A hinged four-door unit shows the arcs sweeping into the room, so a tight layout reveals the conflict immediately; a sliding version shows leaves overlapping within the carcass line and reclaims that floor. Because the carcass length and the 550–650 mm depth are identical either way, you can carry the four-door footprint through the design and resolve the door type once the bed is placed. On larger masters, designers frequently default to sliding precisely to keep the floor between bed and wardrobe usable.

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Questions

Frequently asked

Is the 4 door wardrobe CAD block free for commercial work?+

Yes. It downloads free in DWG with no signup, no watermark and no attribution requirement, and it is cleared for commercial and personal project use.

How wide is a typical four-door wardrobe run?+

Often around 1800–2200 mm, since four hinged leaves add up to roughly that span. Treat the figure as a planning range and stretch or scale the block to suit your actual run.

What view is included in the file?+

Plan view — the run seen from above with four door leaves and their swing indication. That is the view used to lay out bedrooms and check clearances.

Do hinged doors take a lot of swing room?+

Across four leaves the combined clearance strip can be substantial, often 450–600 mm deep. If the room is tight, a sliding-door wardrobe avoids the swing — check the door-swing arcs in the block before placing the bed.

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