When you're planning a modular wall project, the product is rarely the problem, the installation process is. And the truth is, even experienced dealers can run into preventable issues that create delays, add cost, or cause warranty headaches.
This guide breaks down the most common modular wall installation mistakes we've seen and how to get ahead of them before install day. If you're working with a dealer, this will help you ask the right questions and make sure the job goes smoothly.
It’s tempting to rely on drawings or photos and assume the space will behave. But things like structural columns, HVAC ducts, ceiling bulkheads, elevator limits and loads often differ from plan. In one instance, crews found out on the 10th floor that elevator height was lower than expected, forcing last‑minute repackaging and extra hours.
What you must do:
Ask your modular wall supplier or install team:
“Have you done a physical walkthrough of the space?”
“Did you check ceiling heights, obstructions, and floor levels?”
“Do you have photos and notes from that visit?”
Modular might look like a plug‑and‑play solution, but behind the scenes you’re dealing with frames, gaskets, connectors, posts, fasteners, electrical/data integration.
What you must do:
Treat modular walls like structural or architectural systems, not like standard furniture.
Get full documentation of the modules: what components, what connections, what tolerances.
Ask your modular wall supplier or install team:
''How many of these exact installs have you done in the last 6‑12 months?”
“What hiccups have you seen?”
Modular walls don’t exist in a vacuum. Electrical, HVAC diffusers, sprinkler heads, lighting and finishes all interface.
What you must do:
Only freeze the modular wall layout after MEP/finishes drawings are final.
Make sure building substrate, ceiling grid, final floor finish, especially raised floors, are ready or accounted for in measurement.
Hold a coordination meeting with all trades plus your modular wall supplier.
4. Ignoring Tolerances, Clearances & Adjustability
Rarely is a job site perfectly plumb, square, level. If you don’t built in adjustability, the modular walls will fight the structure, resulting in bowing, visible gaps or misalignment.
What you must do:
Set a tolerance guideline (for example ± 3‑5 mm) and make sure the install team uses adjustable brackets/shims.
Always start with the “critical modules” (those that lock alignment) then build outward.
Use laser‑level and plumb lines to check as you go. Don’t assume the wall or floor is perfect.
Tall modules, glass partitions and shelving need proper anchoring to structure.
What you must do:
Always anchor modules back to structural elements (studs, concrete). Don’t rely on drywall or finishes for primary support.
Use anti‑tip brackets, cross‑bracing where needed.
After installation, do stability checks: “push” tests, check for wobble, photograph anchor points. Document everything.
Even with good components and coordination, if the install happens too early, too late or in the wrong order, problems result.
What you must do:
Create a detailed installation schedule with phasing, buffer days, clear precedence (what must happen before, what after).
Start from endpoints/corners and move inward to maintain alignment control.
Control deliveries: just‑in‑time is ideal (not too early, not too late).
Build flexibility and float into your schedule. Don’t assume zero buffer.
Ask your modular wall supplier or install team:
We recommend scheduling the modular wall installation after the major building services (electrical, data conduit, HVAC diffusers, sprinkler hangs) and structural supports are in place, but before final finishes (or at least before the trades that finish ceiling grids, floor finishes, millwork, and final paint) begin. This gives the install team proper access, avoids finishing trade damage, and ensures alignment and anchoring are done in a clean window.
Modular systems arrive with many pieces: panels, hardware packs, brackets, fasteners. Missing screws or missing parts can halt progress.
What you must do:
On arrival, unload and inventory against packing lists and shop drawings. Label modules and hardware by location.
Keep a spare kit of generic fasteners/brackets for onsite adjustments.
Photograph discrepancies immediately; document for replacements.
Ask your modular wall supplier or install team:
“What’s the process if something is missing and how quickly can it be replaced?”
A lot of failures trace back to missing or outdated drawings, missing module labeling, no as‑built record. Example: A modular partition installed to old drawings blocked conduit access.
What you must do:
Require full shop (or fabrication) drawings: 2D/3D, parts list, sequences. Label everything.
During installation, create as‑built notes: any changes, elevations, anchor points, concealments. Photograph everything.
Ask your modular wall supplier or install team:
“Can you share the latest shop drawings and elevations for this space?”
Modern modular walls often carry power, data, lighting, AV sensors. If cable/conduit integration is ignored, you end up with misaligned ports, rework, and costly fixes.
What you must do:
Pre‑plan routes: power, data, AV, lighting - do this during layout and design stage.
Use proper grommets, raceways, vertical/cab modules, ensure conduit stub‑outs match module expectations.
Leave slack for future reconfigurations. Label all cables/terminations. Coordinate with electrical & AV trades early.
Ask your modular wall supplier or install team:
When we rush, we skip the “last 5%” that matters: alignment, anchoring checks, cable strain relief, gaps, finish details.
What you must do:
Use a structured final checklist: plumb, level, torque, gap tolerance, door/drawer function, finish work, cable strain relief, lighting.
Conduct a punch walk module by module, joint by joint. Photograph fixes.
Sign‑off and keep a warranty log.
Ask your modular wall supplier or install team:
Your modular wall dealer should love this conversation - it shows you care about doing the job right, and it gives them a chance to demonstrate their expertise.
Print this out, bring it to your next project meeting, or email it to your project manager. Say:
“We’re excited about this install and want to make sure we’re set up for success. Here are a few things we’d love to double-check before install begins.”
If they can walk through this with clarity and confidence, you’re in good hands. If not? That might be your biggest red flag yet.
At Office Interiors, our certified installers have completed hundreds of modular wall projects across NS, NB and PEI. We know the buildings, the logistics, the trades, and the systems inside and out. Whether it’s a corporate office, university, or healthcare environment, our team brings the experience and the attention to detail that ensures your installation is done right the first time. If you want it done smoothly, safely, and professionally, we're the team to call. Reach out to us today.