
TREKU
About Us
Muebles Treku origins date back to 1947 where they started out in a workshop in Zarautz, a beautiful coastal town with a long-established tradition in the area of woodworking and carpentry. The original company name was taken from its founder, Jesus Aldabaldetrecu, a cabinetmaker of enterprising spirit.
The workshop quickly earned a reputation in the region for producing high-quality classical bedrooms. The business underwent a process of industrialisation that was completed by the second generation of the family.
Traditional and contemporary – The name ‘Treku’ comes from the Basque surname Aldabaldetreku. Today, the company is run by the third generation of the family, who continue the company tradition of working in a profession they love.
Over the years – over half a century of history – Treku has certainly lived its share of experiences, some of them challenging, including economic crises that have hit the business hard, or the devastating floods of 1953 and 1983. But it is the good experiences that are worth remembering, among them the friendships forged inside and outside the company, the recognition of many loyal customers and the excitement inspired by reaching new markets. Having learned from the company’s earlier generations, Treku has been able to bring the contemporary and the traditional together successfully in their products, incorporating details that take us back in time.
Today, the company continues to broaden its knowledge through contact with other countries, continents and cultures, which teach us something new every day.
Our values
In 1947, a local from Zarautz, a small coastal town in the Basque Country, opened his own carpentry workshop. His name was Jesús Aldabaldetrecu, he was 36 years old and had been working in the field since he was a boy. Jesús was just another link to a woodworking tradition which dated back more than five hundred years in this neck of the woods in the province of Gipuzkoa. While most of the coastal town of the XVI century were busy fishing at sea, the people of Zarautz were becoming specialists in the construction of small fishing boats and traineras or rowing boats - speedy long boats which were fundamental in whale hunting. The town achieved worldwide fame for its craftsmanship. The profound economic transformations occurring in Europe in the mid-XIX century brought with them a decline in traditional riverside shipyards.
Crisis loomed on the horizon. A door which had been open for centuries started to close, but various windows were simultaneously flung open. One of these windows was to tourism: at the same time as the industrial revolution, sea and beach tourism became popular on a section of the Cantabrian Sea. Zarautz, with its stretch of beach over 2 kilometers long, was one of the places that Royalty and the bourgeoisie of the time chose to partake in the famous activity known as baños de ola - jumping through the waves while holding onto a rope. The shipyards, where boats were built for centuries, became home to the creation of luxury furniture. Almost 70 years after being founded, the company Muebles Treku remains in the hands of Jesús Aldabaldetrecu’s descendants. Times and designs may have changed, but the handmade resilience and tradition still remain.
When dawn breaks in Zarautz, the rays of the sun take a few more minutes more to fall on the Olaa neighbourhood. The light uses this time to break through the hills among which this entirely rural spot is nestled, just two kilometers from one of the Basque Country’s best-known beaches. Olaa bears no resemblance to touristy Zarautz. It is covered in green pastures still grazed by livestock and is scantly inhabited by a dozen evenly-scattered homesteads, the characteristic Basque farm. A small freshwater stream called Olaa, the very same that gives the place its name, forms its backbone as it crosses the neighbourhood, allowing the road to run by its side.
This is home to Muebles Treku’s factory, a building which awakens at the same time each day when an operator turns on the furnace, feeding it with discarded wood from furniture construction, and starts up all the machinery. An hour later, when the rest of the workers arrive, the production cycle is already warmed up and ready to go so they can get started on their work.