Skip to content

Service area

Inside a 30-mile radius from our DC showroom.

We do most of our work in ten DC, Maryland, and Northern Virginia neighborhoods. Each has its own architecture and its own design constraints — we draw cabinetry for the room that is actually there.

Custom cabinetry in Washington DC neighborhoods served by Pannello
3–5 week lead time · industry standard 8–12
European engineering · Blum & Salice hardware, 18mm carcass
Designer-led · drawn before it's quoted
In-house installation · no subcontractors

Washington DC

Georgetown

8 minutes from showroom · 20007, 20057

Federal and early Victorian rowhouses (1810–1880), with a small number of Federal-revival new builds on the eastern edge. Most kitchens are 10×14 or smaller, often L-shaped or galley, with original brick chimney chases and load walls.

Explore Georgetown

Dupont Circle

12 minutes from showroom · 20036

Late-Victorian and Edwardian rowhouses (1885–1915) east of Connecticut Avenue, plus mid-rise pre-war condo conversions west of it. Rowhouse kitchens are typically rear-ground-floor; condos are often galley or one-wall.

Explore Dupont Circle

Foggy Bottom

10 minutes from showroom · 20037

High-rise mid-century and contemporary condos with smaller footprint kitchens, plus a small pocket of 1850–1880 townhouses near 25th Street.

Explore Foggy Bottom

Downtown DC

15 minutes from showroom · 20005

New-build condos (2000s–2020s) with smaller-footprint kitchens, plus a pocket of converted warehouse lofts with high ceilings, exposed structure, and open plans.

Explore Downtown DC

Brookland

20 minutes from showroom · 20018

Foursquares, bungalows, and Cape Cods (1900–1935) with mostly original floor plans. Smaller kitchens (10×12 typical) toward the rear of the house.

Explore Brookland

West End

11 minutes from showroom · 20037

High-end mid-rise condo buildings with builder-spec kitchens that owners frequently rebuild within 5 years of purchase.

Explore West End

Chevy Chase

18 minutes from showroom · 20015, 20815

Center-hall colonials, Tudor revivals, Cape Cods (1920–1945), plus a small pocket of contemporary new construction.

Explore Chevy Chase