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Block landing · 5 door wardrobe cad block

Free 5 door wardrobe CAD block in DWG in 2026

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By Sumana Kumar · Published 15 Nov 2025 · Updated 29 Mar 2026

A five-door wardrobe is a generous fitted run for a large master bedroom, combining a double bay, a single bay and a third unit into one continuous wall of storage. A scaled 5 door wardrobe CAD block lets you set out that long run and confirm it fits the wall without leaving an awkward gap. This page offers a free five-door wardrobe block in DWG, drawn in plan view at true millimetre dimensions for AutoCAD 2004 or later, free for personal and commercial work, with no signup and no watermark.

Use this block when a room has a long unbroken wall to give over to storage and a four-door run would leave space unused. Five leaves provide ample hanging, shelf and drawer storage for a couple, and because the block is drawn to scale you can verify the run length, the swing clearances and the bed position the moment it appears on the plan.

What a 5 door wardrobe block shows

The block represents a five-bay cupboard from above: a long carcass rectangle divided into five door leaves, often a mix of a double bay and singles, with swing arcs or open-direction lines for each leaf. In plan the swing arcs are the working detail, because five hinged leaves opening into the room produce a long clearance strip you need to keep free.

The five-door unit still behaves as a single storage object in the drawing — you move, copy and rotate it as one block reference. It is the run you choose when a four-door unit is just short of filling the wall and a six-door run would over-run it. Think of it as the odd-numbered fit between the two standard even runs.

Views and what's included

The file ships in plan view, the view used for setting out bedrooms and checking circulation. The plan carries the carcass outline, the five door leaves and their swing indication so you can place the run, mirror it end-for-end and test clearances against the bed, the door and any window.

Keep the block on a furniture layer to coordinate with the bed, nightstands and dressing table. For a joinery elevation of the five fronts seen face-on, draw that on a separate elevation layer; the plan block here is for laying out the room rather than for the fabrication drawing.

Typical 5 door wardrobe sizing

These are planning ranges, not fixed figures. A five-door hinged wardrobe is commonly around 2250–2750 mm wide, since five leaves of roughly 450–550 mm each add up to that span. Depth is usually 550–650 mm to clear a front-to-back rail. Height tracks the ceiling and does not appear in plan.

Leave clear floor in front for the doors. Hinged leaves typically need 450–600 mm of swing clearance, and across five leaves that strip is long, so check that the bed and walkway stay clear of it. With the scaled block placed, the clearance reads straight off the swing arcs.

How to insert and place the block

The block is 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 on insertion. 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 the room.

Move the placed block to a furniture layer. Mirror it about its centreline if the doors swing the wrong way. Because a five-door run is long, check it does not over-run the wall or collide with the door reveal; if the wall length is slightly off, stretch the carcass with grips, keeping the leaf widths sensible, or switch to a four- or six-door unit from the same family.

Where five-door wardrobes are used

Five-door runs suit large master bedrooms in detached and semi-detached houses, principal suites in upper-tier apartments, and premium hotel and serviced-apartment rooms with a long storage wall. They bridge the gap between a standard four-door run and a full six-door wall, which is exactly the run designers reach for when a room's wall length does not divide neatly into even bays.

Pair the block with the bed, bedside-table and dressing-table blocks in the furniture category to fit out the room. Where the wall is shorter, drop to a four- or three-door unit; where it is longer, move to a six-door run. Keeping the run within one block family keeps every bedroom in the scheme drawn the same way.

Layering and reuse

Keep the wardrobe on a dedicated furniture layer so storage can be frozen independently of the architecture. A distinct colour and lineweight for furniture lets you produce a clean shell plan and a furnished plan from one drawing, and the swing arcs can sit on a lighter sub-layer for presentation sheets where you do not want them dominating.

Tag the run as a block with a type attribute so a furniture schedule can be extracted directly — handy when a fit-out needs a per-room count of storage units. Once a large master is set out, WBLOCK the bed-and-wardrobe arrangement as a single reusable unit so the room can be repeated across the project without redrawing the long storage run each time.

Splitting the bays in an odd run

A five-door run is interesting because five is an odd number, so the bays do not split into neat pairs the way a four- or six-door run does. The usual resolution is a double bay plus a single bay plus another double, or a run of singles, and the split you choose affects what goes where: a single leaf suits a shelved or drawer tower, while a double bay gives a continuous hanging rail. The plan block carries the leaf divisions so that intent is visible before the joinery is drawn.

This matters when you set the run out against the wall. Because the leaves can be regrouped, a five-door unit is more adaptable to an awkward wall length than an even run — you can nudge the single bay to where a shorter leaf is needed beside a corner or a reveal. Stretch the carcass to the wall, keep each leaf a usable width, and let the odd bay absorb the leftover so the run finishes flush without an ugly filler panel.

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Questions

Frequently asked

Is the 5 door wardrobe CAD block free?+

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

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

Often around 2250–2750 mm, since five hinged leaves add up to roughly that span. Use the figure as a planning range and stretch or scale the block to match your real run.

When should I pick five doors over four or six?+

Choose five when a four-door run is just short of filling the wall and a six-door run would over-run it. The odd-numbered run lets you fill a long wall without leaving an awkward gap.

What view is in the file?+

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

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