Wall Paneling from Fischer's workshop — planned, built and installed by one team. Our wall paneling comes out of the same hall where we make furniture, kitchens and stairs. No subcontractors, no three-country supply chain, no compromises in the detail.
Every fit-out project starts with an on-site survey. We measure to the millimetre, check walls for plumb and ceilings for height, document conduit runs and sockets. We then draw the piece in our own CAD; you receive plan and 3D view. Only once the drawing is right does the piece go into build.
We work with solid wood and veneered panels from PEFC-certified European forestry. For visible surfaces we use real veneer only — no foils, no prints. Finishes are oiled, waxed, or left raw; on request fire-rated (B1) or acoustically perforated.
Installation is handled by our own crew with truck crane, scissor lift and dedicated jointing tools. For larger works — retail fit-out, office build-out, hotel interior — we coordinate directly with architect and site management. Handover protocol, care instructions and a five-year snagging warranty are standard.
Frequently asked about Wall Paneling
Answers to the questions we hear most often — pricing, materials, process. If something is missing, just call.
Plain slatted oak panels with oil finish start at around 220 euros per square metre including installation. More elaborate solutions with herringbone veneer, marquetry or acoustically perforated backings range between 380 and 650 euros per square metre. The premium often pays off behind the TV in the living room or in the entrance hall, where the wall becomes a statement.
Yes, with the right wood and finish. For bathrooms we recommend larch or thermo-ash with multi-coat hard wax oil — that handles splash water and steam for decades. In kitchens, oak and walnut work very well as long as the paneling is not directly behind the cooker.
We use concealed fixings via clip rails or magnetic mounts — no visible screws, no shot marks. That also makes the wall removable if needed, which matters in rented properties and listed buildings.