Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

Lead Times & Scheduling

Lead times are only reliable when the specification is clear.

Most delays do not begin in production. They begin earlier, when finishes are still moving, sizes are incomplete, or no single approved record exists. An undefined specification produces provisional timing. A controlled specification produces dependable timing.

How timing is controlled

Project enquiry

Early-stage projects vary. Some need guidance, some are ready for quotation, and some require review against drawings or an existing schedule. At this point, timing is indicative.

Hardware Schedule Pack

The schedule brings selections, sizes, centres, finishes, quantities, and approvals into one working specification. Once confirmed, the project is ready for procurement, and timing becomes reliable.

Production

With the specification fixed, manufacturing proceeds without revision. Finishes are produced to the approved standard. Lead times apply as intended.

Typical lead times

Made to order in England

Heritage Collection

4–6 weeks from confirmed specification

Atelier Materials
6–8 weeks depending on material and finish

Bespoke
Confirmed individually according to design, material, finish, and technical requirements before production begins

Sampling and sign-off

Finish confirmation before ordering prevents delay later in the project. Heritage finish samples are typically dispatched more quickly. Atelier materials may require longer sample lead times. No item proceeds to production until finish approval is confirmed.

Changes and continuity

Post-approval changes are the primary cause of delay. Where a controlled schedule is in place, revisions, reorders, replacements, and later project phases remain aligned to the original specification.


Lead time becomes dependable when the specification is controlled.