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Furniture assembly in Auckland covers more ground than turning Allen keys. The job runs from a flatpack on the floor to a finished piece in the room, and a few things sit in between that catch people out. Here's what's actually covered.
Flatpack furniture assembly is the work most people picture: unpacking the box, sorting the fittings, following the manual page by page, and putting the piece together so it stands square and level. The reality runs a bit longer than that. A good furniture assembly handyman will check parts against the manifest before starting, work the dowels and cam locks in the right order so nothing seizes, and tighten everything to spec without stripping the MDF. Bed frames, drawers, bookcases, wardrobes, desks, dining tables, sideboards, TV units. They all follow the same disciplined sequence. The result is a piece that doesn't need adjusting later, doesn't wobble, and doesn't have leftover screws you weren't sure about.
Most furniture assembly services in Auckland also handle disassembly and reassembly, which becomes important when you're moving house. Flatpack pieces are designed to go together once. Take them apart without care and the fittings strip, the panels bow, and the rebuild on the other end becomes a much bigger job. We disassemble in reverse order, label and bag each piece's fittings separately, and protect the panels for transit. At the new address, the rebuild is faster because everything's where it should be: no hunting through a bin of mixed screws, no missing dowels, no second trips to the hardware store. Disassembly-only is available too, if a different mover is handling the transit and the rebuild.
Assembly isn't finished when the last screw goes in. Tall furniture should be anchored to the wall, especially wardrobes, tallboys, and bookcases, and anything in a home with kids. Wall-anchoring means reading the wall correctly, then bringing the right fixings for plaster, timber stud, or masonry. The piece itself needs levelling on uneven floors, drawers gliding, doors sitting flush. Then there's the packaging: cardboard, polystyrene, plastic wrap, manuals, and the bag of dowels you'll never need. A complete service takes all of that away. The room after the assembler leaves should look like the room before, minus a flat box and plus a finished piece of furniture.
Starting at
Every furniture assembly includes...