Author
Ersin Oz founded Pannello Home Interiors in Georgetown, Washington DC, with a single premise: that the quality of European custom cabinetry should not require a European lead time.
Before Pannello, Ersin spent more than a decade working within the European cabinetry and interior design supply chain — sourcing doors and finishes from Italian and German manufacturers, working alongside residential architects and interior designers on high-specification kitchen and bath programs across the DC metro area. The pattern he kept seeing: homeowners and designers who wanted the finish library and engineering of a Boffi or Poliform kitchen, but could not absorb a 14-week import lead time or the freight cost that came with it.
Pannello is the answer he built: a DC-area shop that fabricates carcasses locally, sources doors and finishes from the same European partners the import houses use, and installs with its own crew. The result is a 3 to 5 week lead time on a kitchen that is specified the same way a $200,000 European import would be specified.
Ersin leads every Pannello project from the first showroom consultation through the final hardware adjustment. His writing covers the decisions that matter most in a DC kitchen or bath renovation — construction methods, finish materials, the constraints of Federal and Victorian rowhouse architecture, and the specification questions that determine whether a kitchen still looks right in fifteen years.
He works from Pannello's showroom at 2201 Wisconsin Ave NW in Georgetown, and the team he has built around him reflects the same philosophy: specific, considered, and built to last.
From the Journal
Kitchen and bathroom countertops in Washington DC: quartz, porcelain, and stone (2026)
A complete guide to countertop selection for Washington DC kitchens and bathrooms — engineered quartz, sintered porcelain, marble, quartzite, and granite. What each material costs, how it performs in the DC climate, and how to choose the right surface for your home in 2026.
Home office built-ins in Washington DC: libraries, desks, and study rooms (2026)
A complete guide to custom home office built-ins in Washington DC — library walls, floating desks, bookcase systems, and study room cabinetry for Georgetown rowhouses, Bethesda colonials, and Dupont condos. What they cost, how they work, and what separates a built-in from furniture in 2026.
Custom closets in Washington DC: walk-ins, reach-ins, and wardrobe systems (2026)
A complete guide to custom closet design in Washington DC — walk-in closets, reach-in configurations, and wardrobe wall systems for Georgetown rowhouses, Dupont Circle condos, and McLean primary suites. What closets cost, what they need, and what separates a real custom closet from a catalog system in 2026.
Custom bathroom vanities in Washington DC: a complete design guide (2026)
Wall-hung or floor-standing, Fenix or matte lacquer, quartz or porcelain top — this guide covers every decision in a custom bathroom vanity project for DC, Bethesda, McLean, and Arlington homes in 2026, including real installed costs.
Wood slat wall panels in Washington DC: a complete installation guide (2026)
Real wood slat panels, fluted panels, and acoustic wall treatments for DC homes — what separates real veneer from printed MDF, where wall panels work best in DC rowhouses and condos, what installation requires, and what it costs in 2026.
Custom kitchen cabinets in Georgetown, DC: a guide for Federal rowhouse kitchens (2026)
Georgetown kitchens are not rectangles. This guide covers how to specify custom cabinets for Federal and Victorian rowhouses on O Street, P Street, and the West of Wisconsin corridor — chimney chases, stair turns, historic district rules, and what it costs in 2026.
Custom millwork in Washington DC: built-ins, bookcases, and architectural details (2026)
Custom millwork for DC homes — built-in bookcases, window seats, wainscoting, coffered ceilings, mudroom built-ins, and fireplace surrounds. What millwork costs, how it is specified for Georgetown rowhouses and McLean colonials, and what separates site-built from shop-built millwork in 2026.
Pannello Home Interiors expands custom cabinetry and design services across the DC metro area
Pannello Home Interiors announces expanded service coverage across Washington DC, Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Arlington, McLean, Alexandria, and Silver Spring — bringing European-engineered cabinetry, wall panels, closets, and countertops to the full capital region at a 3 to 5 week lead time.
Custom kitchen cabinets in Washington DC: complete 2026 guide
Everything DC homeowners need to know about custom kitchen cabinets in 2026: construction standards, finish materials, costs by neighborhood, lead times, and how to choose the right cabinet maker for a Georgetown, Bethesda, or McLean kitchen.
How much do quartz countertops cost in Bethesda, MD? (2026 guide)
Quartz countertop costs in Bethesda run $85–$150 per square foot installed. Here is how DC-area pricing breaks down by material, thickness, edge profile, and what a real Bethesda kitchen budget looks like in 2026.
Italian vs German cabinet construction: what actually differs
European cabinetry is often discussed as a single category. The Italian and German construction philosophies differ meaningfully — here is what to look for when specifying.
How to choose quartz vs. porcelain countertops for a DC kitchen
Quartz and porcelain countertops are both strong candidates for DC kitchens, but they behave differently. Here is how to decide which material belongs in your room.
Walk-in closet design for Georgetown rowhouses
Georgetown rowhouses have narrow footprints, thick masonry walls, and no standard room. Here is how Pannello approaches walk-in closet design in these specific buildings.
What does a custom kitchen renovation actually cost in Washington DC?
DC homeowners ask about kitchen renovation cost before they ask about anything else. Here is how to think about scope, material tier, and what drives the final number.
Slat wall panels vs. acoustic wall panels — which is right for your home?
Slat panels and acoustic panels look similar but perform differently. Here is how DC homeowners should think about the distinction before specifying a wall treatment.
The Pannello process: from consultation to installation in 3 to 5 weeks
What actually happens between the first call and a finished kitchen or closet. A clear account of the Pannello process — consultation, measure, design, fabrication, install.
Bathroom vanity trends in DC's high-end homes (2025)
What Pannello is specifying in primary baths across DC, Maryland, and Virginia in 2025 — wall-hung formats, matte finishes, integrated lighting, and stone counter choices.
Custom pantry design for DC row houses and condos
A floor-to-ceiling pantry wall does more than add storage — it solves the workflow problems that a kitchen without a butler pantry was never designed to handle.
Why European hinges (Blum and Salice) outperform American cabinet hardware
Blum and Salice concealed hinges are specified in every Pannello cabinet. Here is what they do differently from American hardware and why it matters over 10 to 20 years of use.
Wardrobe systems for McLean and Chevy Chase master bedrooms
McLean and Chevy Chase master suites are large enough for a real wardrobe system. Here is how Pannello approaches the design for these specific homes and households.
How to work with a cabinet designer: what to expect
What the cabinet design process looks like from the client side — what to bring, what to decide when, and how to get the most from the consultation through installation.
5 signs your kitchen cabinets need replacing, not just refacing
Cabinet refacing replaces the visible surfaces without touching the box. It is the right choice sometimes and the wrong choice often. Here is how to tell the difference.
Schedule a consultation with Ersin
Every Pannello project begins with a 90-minute showroom visit. Bring your floor plan, your reference images, and your questions.
Schedule a Design Consultation