Wallbeds Seattle
 

About Us

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We are a family owned and operated companyin the Pacific Northwest. We offer custom products in addition to our Wallbeds and MurphyBeds, such as Closets, Home Office, and Home Entertainment systems. We manufacture our own products, giving us complete control in the production process.

WallBeds and Murphy Beds

Closets

Home Office

Entertainment Centers

Custom Furniture

Wallbed and Murphy Bed systems are a great way to utilize space in any room. Browse our Wallbed Portfolio page to discover the perfect system for your home. We have built wall bed systems in oak, maple, cherry, birch, alder, knotty alder, rustic pine, ribon sapele, melamine, thermofoil, painted wood, and other popular materials. We strive to be a green company, using materials that are environmentally responsible.

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Our wallbed  and murphy bed systems use mattresses that you can find at any mattress or fine furniture store. We recommend innserspring mattresses, not to exceed 13” in thickness or 100lbs. You do not need a boxspring with our wall bed systems. You can use the mattress that you may already have in your guest room.

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We use spring balanced, cantilevered Murphy Bed systems that are made for the toughest conditions. Our wall beds can be found in resorts and hotels throughout the country. The wallbed mechanism and steel components are covered by a lifetime warranty, and we stand behind our furniture with a 1-year warranty.

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Call or email us today for more information on our Murphy Bed, Wallbeds, Closets, Home Office, Entertainment Centers and more.

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The History of the Wallbed!

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A Wall Bed or Murphy Bed will provide you with more space!

...and we want to give it to you. Are you downsizing to a studio or condo in busy Downtown Seattle or a rapidly growing city like Bellevue, Washington? Wherever you are in the Pacific Northwest. Turn that studio apartment, closet or a guest room into a home office, craft room, media center, den, bonus room, game room - with a Wallbed, Murphy bed or Folding Bed system from The Wallbed Company, the possibilities are endless! We are Murphy Bed experts, and our goal is to help you achieve the space you’ve always dreamed of. Our staff comes equipped with state-of-the-art software, experience, and an attitude towards helping others. From Wall Bed and Murphy Bed design to installation, our goal at The Wallbed Company is to provide you with quality and value in everything that we do.

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Contact The Wallbed Company

Washington

The Wallbed Company
17404 147th Ave SE. Suite I
Monroe, Washington. 98273

206-280-5412

info@thewallbedcompany.com

Oregon

The Wallbed Company
25 N. Bartlett
Medford, Oregon. 97541

541-951-5705 or 541-826-6643

info@thewallbedco.com

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Serving Seattle, King & Snohomish County in Washington State!


Located in the Monroe, Washington, we serve the Seattle metropolitan area. We work extensively in King and Snohomish Counties. We have happy customers all over the Pacific Northwest, from Seattle and Bellevue to Everett and Snohomish. Take a look at our portfolio pages to see some of the beautiful custom closets, wall beds, Murphy beds, folding beds, home office and entertainment center furniture that we have created.

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Murphy bed

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Murphy bed (Wall Bed or wallbed) is a bed that flips up at the head end for vertical storage inside a closet or cabinet. To achieve this, the mattress is attached to the bed frame, often with a bolt at each corner. Murphy beds are used for space-saving purposes, much like a trundle bed is. Due to space limitations, most Murphy beds do not have box springs. Instead, the mattress usually lies on wire mesh. Most Murphy beds are also not equipped with headboards, footboards or bed rails.
While less frequently used in today's homes, Murphy beds can still be found in areas with limited square footage, such as mobile homes and apartments. Since the late 1900s, Murphy Beds have been incorporated into modular cabinetry with glass, mirrors, lighting, or additional units for entertainment storage or computer centers.

Variations

On the most well-known style of Murphy bed, the head end is permanently mounted inside a large closet located in the wall of a bedroom or living room. This type of Murphy bed (and its closet) is usually concealed behind a pair of closet doors. In some cases where construction budgets were tight, there are no doors. Instead, the bottom of the bed is a solid panel. When folded up, this solid panel appears to be part of the wall.
Less typical variations of Murphy beds included one type that was mounted on a swing arm. This arm pivoted the bed between room and closet. On another type, the head end was on casters. This allowed the bed to be stored in any large closet and rolled into any room for use. In many cases, the closet where the Murphy bed was stored doubled as a standard clothes closet.
A similar type of bed is the hideaway bed, first patented in 1885 by Sarah E. Goode. A hideaway bed also folds up when not in use, but is not concealed behind a wall or closet, instead serving double use as a shelf or desk.

History

William L. Murphy applied for a patent for the Murphy bed on April 1, 1916 and was granted Design Patent D49,273 on June 27, 1916. Murphy started the Murphy Wall Bed Company and began production in San Francisco. In January 1990 the company changed its name to the "Murphy Bed Co. Inc."

These beds make appearances in movies, as they lend themselves to slapstick humor in which people are trapped when the bed folds into the upright position, carrying the person on the bed inside. For example, in Stanley Kramer's comedy It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, the smarmy Otto Meyer (Phil Silvers) gets thrown from the fire truck ladder, through a window and onto a Murphy bed, which promptly retracts into the wall. In Mel Brooks' Silent Movie, a hotel's neon sign advertises "Murphy Beds — Charming to the Unsophisticated". Modern Murphy beds utilize a counterbalance system making it near impossible to get trapped.

In 1989 an appellate court held that the term "Murphy bed" is no longer entitled to trademark cover because substantial majorities of the public perceive the term as a generic term for a bed that folds into a wall, rather than the specific model made by the Murphy Bed Co.

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