Bespoke media wall installers Buckinghamshire
Media Walls, Buckinghamshire

Bespoke Media Wall Installers in Buckinghamshire

Buckinghamshire Media Wall Specialists

Statement Pieces for Buckinghamshire Homes

Buckinghamshire clients come to us with a considered brief. A full-height wall in dark walnut for a large open-plan kitchen-living room in Beaconsfield. A stone-panelled build with a wide linear fire in a Chilterns farmhouse. A contemporary floor-to-ceiling unit in a Gerrards Cross detached home where scale matters and proportion has to be exactly right. The brief almost always involves a fireplace. It almost always involves the room holding the wall, rather than the wall filling the room.

We build in materials chosen for the specific room. Smoked oak and walnut for warmth. Venetian plaster for texture and depth. Honed marble and Calacatta stone for surfaces that carry visual weight. Fluted timber, painted cabinetry in any RAL colour. Finish samples come to your home at the design stage. The material language of the wall is agreed with the room in front of us, in your light.

We cover the full county. Beaconsfield, Gerrards Cross, Marlow, Amersham, Chesham, High Wycombe, Princes Risborough, Aylesbury, Wendover, Burnham and all surrounding areas. No travel surcharges. Everything designed, built and installed in-house. One fixed price before we start.

  • All cabling routed during the frame. Nothing visible in the finished wall.
  • LED lighting designed to your room, not a generic template.
  • Smoked oak, marble, Venetian plaster, lacquer. Samples in your home at design stage.
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Areas We Cover in Buckinghamshire

BeaconsfieldGerrards CrossMarlowAmershamCheshamHigh WycombePrinces RisboroughAylesburyWendoverBurnhamChalfont St GilesChalfont St Peter
Materials & Finishes

What We Build With

The material is half the brief. A media wall in pale oak reads completely differently to the same geometry in honed Nero Portoro or hand-lacquered deep navy. We work with clients who know exactly what they want and with clients who need to see options in the room before the choice is clear. Either way, the decision is made with samples, not screenshots.

Common choices on Buckinghamshire projects: smoked oak, walnut and white-pigmented oak for frames and cabinetry. Calacatta gold and honed marble for fireplace surrounds and inset panels. Venetian plaster in warm neutrals for feature wall sections alongside the joinery. High-gloss lacquer and painted MDF for clean contemporary builds. Fluted timber panels where the design calls for texture without adding pattern.

LED lighting is integral to every build. Warm white strips at 2700K run behind pelmet frames, under shelving rails and inside recesses. The light sources are hidden. The light itself is what defines the wall.

Smoked OakAmerican WalnutCalacatta GoldVenetian PlasterNero PortoroIvory LacquerPainted MDFFluted Timber
Media Walls with Panelling
A Buckinghamshire Project

Open-Plan Extension, Beaconsfield

A client in Beaconsfield had knocked through and extended to create a large open-plan kitchen and living room. The gable end wall was 6.2 metres wide and 2.8 metres high. They wanted an 85" screen, a wide linear fire, and for it to feel designed. Not assembled.

At that width, the problem is never the screen. It is what happens either side of it. Centre a media wall on a 6.2m wall and leave space on both sides and it floats. The room does not hold it. You either go full width or you build something with enough visual weight that it earns where it stops.

We went full width. Floor-to-ceiling cabinetry across the full 6.2 metres, with the TV recess and fire offset slightly from centre to work around the structural posts from the extension. The offset is under 200mm. The eye does not read it as asymmetry at that scale, but it meant the cabinetry could run past the posts without landing in an awkward position.

The drawings did not show the real problem. When the boxing came off, the two posts were out of plumb by different amounts, one of them 15mm over the height of the room. Set the cabinetry off the floor and it would have fought the steels the whole way up. We lost most of a day resetting the framing line off the posts instead, and every gable that met them was scribed by hand. Nobody sees that work in the finished wall. That is exactly the point of it.

Material: dark stained oak on the door faces and frame, Calacatta marble slab to the fire surround and back panel. The marble introduced texture at eye level where the wall needed it. Six metres of oak without a material break would have read as fitted furniture. The stone changed what the wall was.

The proportion between screen and fire width was worked out in the drawings before anything went on site. The 85" screen sits in a 2.3m wide recess. The linear fire below it is 1.5m wide. Get that ratio wrong and one swamps the other. It is not something you fix on the day.

On handover day the client stood in front of it for a while and then said it looked like it had always been there. Six metres of cabinetry with two steels and every cable in the room hidden behind it, and the highest compliment available is that nobody can tell how hard it was.

Before You Enquire

The Questions Every Media Wall Consultation in Buckinghamshire Starts With

We have sat in enough living rooms across Beaconsfield, Marlow and Amersham to know the first three questions before they are asked. Here are the honest answers, so you arrive at your consultation ahead of most people.

01

How wide should the fire be?

As wide as the TV, or wider. Never narrower. The moment the screen is wider than the fire below it, the wall reads top-heavy and the whole build looks cheaper than it cost. If the layout cannot take a wider fire, the layout changes. This is the one rule we hold even when a client pushes against it.

02

How high should the TV go?

Lower than you think. The centre of the screen wants to sit close to eye level from your sofa, which usually means lower than where a bracket would end up on instinct. Mount it high and you crane your neck all evening without knowing why the room feels wrong. We measure from your actual sofa on the design visit.

03

What does it actually cost?

Builds start at £7,000 and most land around £9,000 once the fire and lighting are specified. Full-width builds in stone or veneer run £12,000 to £20,000. The number in your quote is the number on the final invoice. If a figure in a quote sounds vague, it is not vague by accident.

Bespoke

From £7,000

Central TV recess with soundbar shelf, timber cabinetry either side, concealed cabling and LED lighting. Painted, timber or lacquer finish.

Premium

From £12,000

Floor-to-ceiling installation with integrated fireplace, premium material finishes and full AV management. Stone, veneer and high-gloss lacquer options.

Commission

From £20,000

A design-led build around a specific material language. Natural stone, book-matched veneer, marble or high-specification lacquer. Fully managed from brief to handover.

All quotes are itemised and fixed before work begins. Complimentary consultation across Buckinghamshire. Full pricing breakdown

How It Works

From Enquiry to Finished Wall

01

Consultation

We visit your home across Buckinghamshire. No charge, no obligation. Most clients receive initial design renders the same day they enquire, before we have even visited the property.

02

Design & Specification

Detailed drawings produced from your exact measurements. Material samples brought to your home in person. Every finish, cable route and lighting position confirmed before your fixed-price quote is issued.

03

Build & Installation

Our own team on site throughout. We manage structural framing, joinery, all concealed cabling and electrical work. If anything changes during the build, you hear from us first. Most Buckinghamshire installations complete within 10 days.

04

Handover

We walk you through the finished wall, demonstrate all lighting and AV, and leave the site clean. You receive a full handover pack: guarantee documents, material references and supplier contacts. Covered by our five-year workmanship guarantee.

The way we work

Why we write everything down

We get called in to look at media walls that someone else started. The client usually shows us the message thread on their phone. The previous contractor built what they thought was agreed. The client expected something different. Neither of them is wrong exactly. The spec just was not precise enough, and nobody noticed until the build was finished and the soundbar did not fit.

That is an expensive oversight. The TV recess comes out 20mm too narrow for the screen already sitting in the box. The soundbar shelf is the right length but the wrong projection. The cabinetry sits a fraction high and the room reads slightly off, for reasons the client struggles to name but cannot stop noticing.

Every dimension in your quote is written precisely. TV recess width, height and depth. Soundbar shelf projection and clearance from finished floor level. Cabinet door configuration, internal shelf heights. Before the quote is issued we go through the drawing with you on site. Once agreed, nothing changes without a written instruction from you. That is not paperwork for its own sake. It stops the alternative.

We work in a lot of homes. You get a sense within the first few minutes of what kind of job it will be. The clients who make tea when you arrive and check in at lunch. The ones who leave a note and go to work. A job where both sides trust each other finishes better. Not because the effort changes, but because the small conversations happen. Questions get answered on the day. Adjustments get made while they still cost nothing.

Payment

Fixed price. Both sides protected.

The financial dispute that ends sole traders runs the same way every time. The contractor quotes fairly, does the work, sends the final invoice. The client claims verbal agreements about extras, invents a defect list, or simply stops responding. Legal action costs more than the invoice, so the contractor absorbs the loss and moves on. We have seen it happen to good people.

Our payment structure is simple. A deposit when you book, to hold your slot and cover materials. A stage payment once the frame is built and first fix is done. Final payment on handover day, after you have walked the finished wall with us and confirmed you are satisfied. The price in your quote is the price on the final invoice. Nothing gets added without a written change order you have signed off.

That protects you from surprises. It also means we get paid for what we build. Contractors who operate without this structure are not being relaxed about money. They are exposed. We would rather both sides know exactly where they stand before anyone picks up a tool.

Why it matters

When a media wall goes wrong

The worst job we have been shown was not one of ours. A client handed us their phone and scrolled through a review they had posted about a previous contractor. The job was quoted at one week. It ran to three months.

By the end: fresh plaster dented and left with handprints through the room, workers found smoking inside the house, food and rubbish left through every room upstairs and down. Skirting boards the client had sourced and paid for were cut carelessly, damaged beyond use, and could not be installed. When the client posted about it publicly, the company deleted their comments.

That is not an unusual story. We hear versions of it every few months. What changes is which specific thing went wrong, not whether something did.

Our team does the work. Not a subcontractor brought in when it gets complicated. We are accountable for the full build: framing, joinery, cabling, electrical, finishing. When we leave, we walk the finished wall with you. Every door, every shelf, every lighting circuit. The site is clean. You get a handover pack with your guarantee documents, material references and supplier contacts for anything you might need to match later. Five-year workmanship guarantee on everything we build.

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What we are often asked to fix

  • Soundbar recess cut to wrong dimensions
  • MDF work carried out without dust protection
  • Final payment taken before the job was finished
  • Cupboard doors not made, fitted or routed properly
  • Poor plastering around new framework
  • Cabling left exposed or surface-run after the build
  • Snag list ignored after the contractor left site
What We Say No To

Media Wall Briefs We Turn Down

You learn more about a builder from what they refuse than from anything in their portfolio. These are ours.

  • A fire narrower than the screen above it

    It looks top-heavy on the day it is finished and it never recovers. If the wall cannot take a wider fire, we redesign the wall. We will not build it as drawn, even on instruction.

  • Boarding over a live flue unchecked

    If there is an existing gas fire or open flue in the wall, it gets inspected and properly capped before anything is framed over it. No exceptions, whatever it does to the programme.

  • Starting from a conversation

    No build starts on a verbal agreement, however clear it felt to both sides at the time. Every dimension is drawn, priced and signed before the deposit is banked. The jobs that end in disputes almost never had drawings.

  • Overselling the big build

    A full floor-to-ceiling wall in a room that cannot hold one is a bigger invoice for us and a worse room for you. When the answer is a smaller build, we say so. We have said so in some very large houses.

Fireplace Integration

Media Wall with Integrated Fireplace in Buckinghamshire

Combining a media wall with an integrated fireplace is one of the most requested briefs we receive from Buckinghamshire homeowners. A single wall becomes the complete focal point of the room: TV, fire, cabinetry, lighting. Everything resolved in one considered design.

Most Buckinghamshire homes do not have a gas supply to the living room wall. In these cases we specify a wide-format linear electric fire, typically between 100cm and 150cm wide, sized to hold visual weight against the screen above it rather than look like an afterthought beneath it.

All electrical installation is carried out by our own team and certified to Part P. We manage the full build from structural framing through to finished joinery, concealed cabling and lighting. One contractor, one fixed price.

  • Electric, bioethanol or gas fireplace integration
  • Full structural framing and plasterboard build
  • Concealed cabling for AV, power and lighting
  • Symmetrical cabinetry either side to full height
  • All electrical work certified to Part P
An Honest Story

When a Client Changed His Mind After Handover

A recent client agreed a design with open shelving either side of the screen. We talked it through at the design stage, and we called before the build started to confirm it one more time, because open shelving divides people. He confirmed. We built it exactly as drawn, and on handover day he was delighted with it.

A few weeks later he called. He had lived with the room, looked at that shelving every evening, and decided he wanted glass doors on hinges over it after all.

This happens more often than anyone in this trade admits. A client finishes a project genuinely happy, then sits with the finished room and starts re-running old decisions. It is not a complaint and it is not a defect. It is what living with a finished space does to people.

Here is how we handled it. The shelving was designed, confirmed twice and built exactly as agreed, so the doors could not be free. He had been a good client who trusted us through the build, so they did not need to carry a full margin either. We offered the glasswork and our time at cost. Not free, not full price, and the conversation stayed easy on both sides.

We tell this story because it is the part of the job no portfolio shows. The five-year guarantee covers what we build. How a company behaves once the job is finished and paid for covers everything else.

Common Questions

Buckinghamshire Media Wall FAQs

Everything you need to know about our Buckinghamshire media wall service.

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Yes. We work across the full county of Buckinghamshire. If you are searching for media wall builders near me, we cover Beaconsfield, Gerrards Cross, Marlow, Amersham, Chesham, High Wycombe, Princes Risborough, Aylesbury, Wendover, Burnham and all surrounding towns and villages. No travel surcharge applies within Buckinghamshire. Contact us to confirm your postcode.

Yes, we regularly work across Buckinghamshire and the wider Home Counties. Our portfolio includes projects in Beaconsfield, Gerrards Cross, Marlow and throughout the county. We are happy to provide local references on request.

This depends on the size of the space and the complexity of the build. Most installations are completed within 10 days. We confirm the exact programme as part of your quote so you know what to expect before we start.

A bespoke media wall starts from £7,000. This includes fully custom cabinetry built to your exact dimensions, concealed cabling and AV integration. There are no off-the-shelf units. Everything is designed and built specifically for your room. A full-width floor-to-ceiling build with integrated lighting and fireplace typically ranges from £10,000 to £20,000 depending on size and materials. All quotes are fixed price.

Yes. We install media walls with and without integrated fireplaces. For rooms without a gas supply we typically specify a wide-format linear electric fire. For rooms with an existing gas supply we can work with a gas fire. We manage the full build including framing, joinery, concealed cabling and all electrical work certified to Part P.

Yes. Many of our Buckinghamshire projects are in Chilterns AONB properties, Georgian and Victorian houses, and larger detached homes across the county. We are experienced in working around original features, uneven walls and period architecture. Everything is built in situ and scribed precisely to your room.

Yes. We can design the joinery to accommodate your TV, soundbar, speakers and any other AV equipment with all cabling fully concealed. However, the supply of AV equipment is not included in our price and is not covered by our workmanship guarantee. We build the space for it. You supply the equipment.

Yes. Timber is one of the most requested materials for media walls in Buckinghamshire homes. Smoked oak, American walnut, white-pigmented oak and FSC-certified hardwoods are all available. We cut, machine and finish every timber component in-house, which means you can specify unusual dimensions, mixed species or an unusual grain direction without the premium a third-party joinery supplier would add.

Yes. We regularly work from a reference: an existing floor, a piece of furniture, a fabric or a paint reference. Timber species, stain tones, lacquer colours in any RAL or BS reference, and plaster finishes can all be matched or closely harmonised. At the design stage we bring material samples to your home so the decision is made in your light, against your room.

Yes. All joinery and structural work carries a five-year workmanship guarantee. If anything moves, warps or fails to perform as installed, we return and put it right at no cost. The guarantee covers the build: the cabinetry, the framing, the finishing and all fitted lighting. It does not extend to third-party AV equipment or to normal wear on consumable components such as bulbs.

Our current lead time is up to 12 weeks from deposit to installation start. We take on a limited number of projects at any one time so each build receives the full attention of our team. The earlier you get in touch, the more flexibility we have on scheduling your preferred window.

Yes. In a smaller space the design approach changes: we prioritise proportion over scale, choosing a TV size and cabinetry depth that suits the room rather than the largest that will physically fit. Floating shelves, alcove-style units and half-wall configurations all work well in compact living rooms. We will always tell you honestly if a full floor-to-ceiling build would overpower your space.

Ready to Transform Your Buckinghamshire Home?

Complimentary consultation across all of Buckinghamshire. Full quote before work begins. No hidden costs.

Current lead time: up to 12 weeks.