cadblockdwg

Block landing · corner wardrobe cad block

Free corner wardrobe CAD block in DWG

DWGDXFFree1,099 words

By Sumana Kumar · Published 4 Sept 2025 · Updated 20 Apr 2026

A corner wardrobe wraps two walls to turn an otherwise awkward room corner into usable storage, which is why it is a favourite in rooms where a straight run would block a door or a window. A scaled corner wardrobe CAD block captures that L-shaped footprint so the plan shows exactly how the unit fills the corner and how its doors open. This page offers a free corner 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.

Reach for this block when a room's geometry rules out a long straight wardrobe — a window or door takes the main wall, or the room is small and a corner unit packs more storage into the same floor than two short runs would. Because the block is drawn to scale, the L-shaped footprint and the door swings let you confirm the corner solution works the instant it lands on the plan.

What a corner wardrobe block represents

The block shows an L-shaped wardrobe from above: two carcass runs meeting at a right angle in the room corner, with door leaves and swing arcs on each face. The inside corner where the two runs meet is the detail that distinguishes this unit — it is usually drawn as a blind or shelved zone, because two deep runs meeting at a corner lose usable rail in the return.

The corner unit is one storage object built from two runs. You handle it as a single block reference for placing and rotating, then orient it so the L tucks into the chosen corner. It is the answer to a corner that a straight wardrobe cannot use, turning dead floor into hanging and shelf space.

Views and what's included

The download ships in plan view, the view used to fit the unit into the corner and check its swings. The plan carries the two carcass runs, the inside-corner zone, the door leaves and their swing arcs so you can place the L, rotate it to the right corner and test clearances against the bed and the adjacent walls.

Keep the block on a furniture layer alongside the rest of the bedroom furniture. Because the corner detail matters for the joinery, you can put the inside-corner indication on a sub-layer so it reads clearly; a face-on elevation of each run belongs on its own elevation layer for the cabinet drawing.

Typical corner wardrobe sizing

Use these as planning ranges. Each run of a corner wardrobe is usually the standard 550–650 mm deep, and the two runs extend along their walls to whatever length the room allows — commonly 900–1500 mm per leg, though it varies widely. The inside corner consumes a square roughly equal to the depth on each side, which is why that zone is treated as blind or as a shelf.

Swing clearance follows the door type: hinged leaves need 450–600 mm of clear floor in front of each run. Because the unit occupies a corner, check the swings on both faces — a leaf on one run must not clash with a leaf on the other near the inside corner. The scaled block makes that two-way check visible at a glance.

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, and snap the insertion point to the inside room corner so both runs sit flush against their walls at once.

Rotate the block in 90-degree steps to drop the L into any of the four corners, and mirror it if the handedness is wrong for the room. Stretch each leg with grips to match the wall lengths, keeping the inside-corner zone intact. Move the placed block onto a furniture layer so it freezes cleanly with the rest of the furniture.

Where corner wardrobes are used

Corner wardrobes suit small and awkwardly shaped bedrooms, rooms where windows and doors take the long walls, attic and dormer rooms with sloped ceilings limiting the usable wall, and children's rooms where a corner unit leaves more central floor for play. They are the storage solution when the room's openings leave no straight wall long enough for a conventional run.

Pair the block with the bed, bedside-table and dressing-table blocks in the furniture category, and with the door and window blocks so you can confirm the corner unit clears the openings on both walls. Where a long straight wall is available, a conventional multi-door run is simpler — but the corner unit is what rescues a difficult room's storage.

Layering and corner detailing

Keep the corner wardrobe on a furniture layer so storage freezes independently of the architecture, and put the inside-corner zone on a sub-layer so its blind or shelved nature is unambiguous on the plan. Clear layering matters more here than for a straight run, because the corner geometry is easy to misread if everything sits on one layer.

Tag the unit as a block with a type attribute so a furniture schedule distinguishes corner units from straight runs — they cost differently to make because of the corner carcass. When a room is set out, WBLOCK the bed-and-corner-wardrobe arrangement as a reusable unit so a standard awkward room can be repeated across a scheme without re-solving the corner each time.

Free download

Browse the full library — DWG & DXF, no signup.

Download CAD blocks

Questions

Frequently asked

Is the corner 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 does the inside corner work on an L-shaped wardrobe?+

Two deep runs meeting at a right angle lose usable rail in the return, so the inside corner is usually drawn as a blind zone or fitted with shelving rather than hanging. The block shows that zone so the layout is honest.

Can I rotate the block into any corner?+

Yes. Snap the insertion point to the inside room corner, then rotate in 90-degree steps to suit any of the four corners, and mirror the block if the handedness is wrong for the room.

What clearance check is special to a corner unit?+

Check the door swings on both runs near the inside corner — a leaf on one face must not clash with a leaf on the other. Allow 450–600 mm of swing in front of each run and confirm the two do not overlap.

Related downloads

Blocks for this guide

Related categories

Related guides