Surface finishes
- Raw cypress fronts
- Washi-inspired screen panel
- Brushed travertine bench top
- Charred wood reveal line
- Raw clay plaster wall context
Loggia
A made-to-order Loggia entry wall with a cane-accent mail alcove, seated bench, and closed shoe storage.
Published Reviewed

Overview
The full design intent, materials, and how this system is built — in detail.
Loggia Entryway Suite with Cane Mail Bench Alcove is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time. Product imagery shown is a design rendering for storage rhythm, arrival flow, and finish mood; final manufactured product may vary after site measurement, sample approval, and shop drawings.
The Cane Mail Bench Alcove gives Loggia a quieter everyday arrival use case. Existing Loggia products already cover gallery arrival walls, handle-free foyer spines, parcel consoles, precision service walls, reeded parcel valets, walnut foyer archives, appliance drop zones, mudroom consoles, keydrop benches, and umbrella niches. This SKU focuses on a seated mail-sorting alcove that combines closed shoe storage, a soft cane-accent screen, and a compact bench for daily entry routines.
The layout is meant for homes where the first five minutes after entering matter. Mail, keys, small deliveries, shoes, bags, and outerwear can quickly make a premium foyer feel messy. A measured alcove gives those items a defined landing point while the closed cabinet fronts keep the public view calm. The bench is useful for changing shoes, but it does not turn the product into a loose furniture piece.
This module should be planned around corridor width, door swing, shoe count, wall backing, outlet needs, parcel habits, bench height, and sightline from the living area. Fadior can adjust the mail shelf width, bench length, side tower height, screen texture, shoe volume, and finish sample after site measurement, while preserving the core idea of a calm entry wall with one organized mail-and-bench center.
The module dimensions are 2.6 meters of base cabinet planning, 0.8 meters of wall cabinet planning, 1.4 meters of tall cabinet planning, and 1.6 meters of countertop planning. The publisher computes the USD price from those meter values, so this copy does not state a price, discount, package total, or promotion.
For a villa foyer, apartment entry, or side arrival corridor, the value comes from restraint and repeatable habits. Raw cypress tones keep the wall warm, the brushed travertine bench top gives the seat a durable surface, and the washi-inspired screen softens the mail alcove without exposing clutter. The result is an entryway product that looks quiet even when the household routine is busy.
A good site survey should photograph the full entry wall, adjacent door swing, floor level, ceiling height, shoe volume, parcel habits, switch positions, and the view from nearby rooms. The team should also ask who sorts mail, where bags land, whether children use the bench, and whether the client needs hidden charging. Those small habits decide whether the alcove feels useful or just decorative.
The public image set keeps every cabinet face closed and exterior-facing because this listing sells the finished residential presence, not construction detail. Hardware, anchoring, drawer runners, shoe ventilation, wall backing, and service access still matter, but those details belong in measured drawings and technical review after the buyer confirms the visible direction.
During quotation, Fadior should ask whether the client is prioritizing shoe concealment, mail sorting, parcel staging, seated shoe changes, quiet screening, or a calmer entry view from the main room. If the answer is an organized arrival wall with soft material contrast and no exposed clutter, the Cane Mail Bench Alcove is a strong starting point.
The final specification should change if the client changes wall length, bench height, screen panel size, shoe volume, parcel shelf depth, outlet location, or site conditions. That is why the listing uses formula-pricing inputs instead of a manual price claim. The SKU gives the sales conversation a precise starting point while keeping the made-to-order process honest.
The cane-accent language should stay functional. A screen panel can soften the entry view, but it should not hide the fact that the alcove is for real daily use. The mail shelf needs enough depth for envelopes and small parcels without creating a dump zone. The bench top should be comfortable for shoe changes, but strong enough for bags, folded coats, and short parcel staging. Closed shoe storage below keeps the foyer ordered when guests arrive.
Material review matters because entryways receive more abrasion than a display wall. Raw cypress gives the product warmth, but the finish should be sampled against the actual floor and door color. A brushed travertine bench top can feel quiet and durable, but edge thickness, stain resistance, and cleaning method should be confirmed. The washi-like screen should be judged for privacy, texture, and shadow, not treated as a decorative panel chosen in isolation.
The module also needs a clear traffic plan. A bench that is too deep can narrow a corridor; a mail shelf that sits too high can become awkward for children or older family members; a side tower that is too tall can make the first view into the home feel heavy. The best version keeps the arrival sequence calm: shoes disappear, mail has a defined ledge, bags have a short landing point, and the wall still reads as a finished architectural surface.
For specifiers, this SKU is useful because it converts a vague foyer request into measurable decisions. Instead of asking for a generic entry cabinet, the team can ask whether the home needs mail sorting, seated shoe changes, shoe concealment, parcel landing, soft screening, or a narrow side tower. Each answer maps to a dimension, finish sample, or drawing detail, which makes quotation and revision easier to control.
If the home has a service entrance, garage link, or side corridor, the alcove can be tuned for heavier daily use. If it is the main formal entry, the same idea should become quieter, with fewer visible objects and a more disciplined screen proportion. In both cases, the product should avoid open cubbies, visible labels, exposed shoe interiors, bright display lights, or decorative clutter that would weaken the calm Loggia arrival language.
Before release to production, Fadior should confirm wall anchoring, floor level, moisture exposure from shoes, edge protection on the bench, cable or charging needs, and the cleaning route around the screen. These technical details do not need to dominate the public page, but they determine whether the final installed module works after the first week of use. The visual promise is calm; the measured package must make that calm durable.
The Cane Mail Bench Alcove is strongest when the client wants a high-function entry without a commercial locker feeling. It can support a villa family, a compact apartment, or a secondary arrival corridor because the core rhythm is simple: closed storage below, a seated bench, a mail ledge, a soft screen, and a controlled side tower. That rhythm gives the foyer a place for daily mess while keeping the public face composed.
The final shop drawing should mark the exact bench height, cabinet depth, screen panel width, shoe compartment count, ventilation approach, shelf depth, side tower clearance, and any power route. If the client changes shoe count, parcel habits, screen openness, or corridor width, the drawing should change too. That is the point of a made-to-order SKU: the public listing gives a precise design direction, while the factory package adapts it to the real home.
This final review keeps the product grounded in real use: storage volume, entry movement, mail handling, finish sampling, and drawing approval all stay connected before production begins.

Visual interpretation
See how the product holds its design language at room scale and in close detail.
The image set presents the Loggia module as a calm cypress entry wall with a travertine bench, washi-like screen plane, mail alcove, and closed shoe storage.
The gallery keeps every cabinet face closed and exterior-facing, protecting the product's finished residential intent rather than showing mechanisms or construction.
Key features
These points explain why this flagship product stands out.
Cane Mail Bench Alcove
A soft screened alcove gives mail and small arrivals a defined place without exposing daily clutter.
Closed Shoe Storage
Base fronts hide shoes and entry objects behind finished exterior planes.
Seated Arrival Bench
The bench supports shoe changes, parcels, and brief daily routines near the door.
Formula Dimension Inputs
Base, wall, tall, and countertop meters give quotation work a clear formula-pricing starting point.
Materials and finish
Finish, color, and detailing are selected to keep the product convincing in both specification and daily use.
Surface finishes
Color options


Customization
This is where the product moves from inspiration into a live project discussion.
Customize the mail shelf width, bench length, shoe volume, side tower height, screen panel texture, outlet route, and wall length after site measurement.
For compact apartments, the alcove can compress into a narrow arrival bay. For larger villas, it can stretch into a longer entry wall while preserving the seated mail-and-shoe routine.
Specifications
The key data is organized for clear review before planning and quotation.
| Series | Loggia |
|---|---|
| Category | Entryway |
| Differentiator | Cane Mail Bench Alcove |
| Module dimensions | 2.6 m base, 0.8 m wall, 1.4 m tall, 1.6 m countertop |
| Production location | Foshan, China |
| Primary use | Entryway mail sorting, seated shoe changes, closed shoe storage, and calm arrival planning |
Quick facts
Material standards, hardware ratings, and construction methods you can cite or verify before you specify.
| Claim | Value | Standard | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Made-to-order production | Manufactured in Foshan, China with approximately 30-day production lead time | Shop SKU disclosure | Placed in the first description paragraph for buyer transparency |
| Design rendering disclosure | Product imagery is a design rendering | Shop SKU disclosure | Placed in concept facts and FAQ for buyer transparency |
| Series binding | Loggia | Sanity catalog | Series comes from the live Sanity catalog |
| Category binding | Entryway | Shared daily plan fallback | Fifth candidate for the 2026-07-12 shopnew schedule after earlier planned categories were consumed |
| Differentiator | Cane Mail Bench Alcove | Slug contract | Title, slug, and product copy use the same differentiator |
| Slug | loggia-cane-mail-bench-alcove-in-loggia | Shop SKU naming | Follows series-differentiator-in-series shape |
| Module dimensions | 2.6 m base, 0.8 m wall, 1.4 m tall, 1.6 m countertop | Formula pricing input | Publisher computes price from these inputs |
| Existing-product distinction | Not another gallery wall, foyer spine, parcel console, service wall, keydrop bench, mudroom console, umbrella niche, or appliance drop zone | Series existing-products review | The differentiator centers on a cane-accented mail sorting alcove with a seated bench and closed shoe storage |
| Image acceptance | Hero is square on a clean white commerce canvas; supporting images cover 4:3 and 16:9 | Shop SKU visual gate | Supports commerce feed and product-page image requirements |
| Visual style binding | Tokyo Wabi Kitchen | Image rotation | Valid Entryway style cell selected by slug/category hash without same-day collision |
FAQ
These questions help buyers compare options and reduce friction before inquiry.
It is made to order and manufactured in Fadior's Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time after measurement, sample approval, and shop drawings. The listing is not a ready-stock entry cabinet. Wall length, door swing, shoe volume, mail habits, parcel shelf depth, bench height, screen texture, and outlet locations should be confirmed before factory release. This review should also cover cleaning access, floor protection, and how often parcels or folded umbrellas arrive together. Confirm this before final drawings.
Other Loggia products already cover gallery walls, foyer spines, parcel consoles, service walls, keydrop benches, mudroom consoles, umbrella niches, and appliance drop zones. This SKU is centered on a cane-accent mail sorting alcove paired with a seated bench and closed shoe storage. It suits buyers who want daily arrivals organized without turning the foyer into open shelving or visible clutter.
No. Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, cabinet rhythm, and spatial intent; final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, finish texture, and measured proportions. Fadior should still confirm physical samples, site measurements, wall backing, bench height, screen panel details, shop drawings, and production details before manufacturing the finished entryway module. The drawing package remains the production authority, while the rendering helps buyer, designer, and factory align around one visible direction. Use samples before approval.
Start with daily behavior, then confirm the physical details. Fadior should measure shoe volume, parcel size, mail sorting habits, bench height, corridor width, wall backing, switch positions, and sightlines from nearby rooms. The cane-accent screen can become more open or more private, the mail shelf can widen or narrow, and the side tower can change height, but those choices should be locked through samples and shop drawings before production.
Related products
These references help the current product stay connected to the wider collection.