pull-out vs. roll-out pantry
fraker
12 years ago
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12 years agorikerk
12 years agoRelated Discussions
Pantry- Pull Out Vs. Door with Attached Storage
Comments (27)I weighed the same options over and over. I have rollout drawers like in the 3rd photo. However, I do not have a full height pantry to the floor. My freezer drawer is at the bottom and the the rollouts and shelves above. I get the issues about things getting lost in the middle of pullouts, like the 1st 2 pics. However the same thing can happen with rollout shelves, especially those that are at the higher up. A pro of the pullouts are that it is one motion like discussed. Pullout and everything comes out. If they are not that wide, I can't see most things getting lost. Biggest issue is cans and that is the same issue even with rollouts. Although I did a shallow rollout where the shelf above is a little higher then a 28oz can on its side. I have the cans on there sides so you can read the labels when you pull it out If you are the one putting groceries away, you tend to know where everything is located. That is the plus. When my wife asks where the x is located, I instinctively know and tell her exactly where it is located. Now my cabinet is 31" wide and I have double doors like the 3rd pic. In retrospect, its kind of a pain. Have to open both doors to get something out. Same issue people complain about with french door fridges. Also, the wide rollouts aren't efficient either. Maybe its more my senario since I only have 3 of them but I have a shelf where there are tall things like bags of chips and much shorter items. In retrospect, it would have been better to have a divider and narrower rollouts. This would have allowed me to use all of the space more efficiently. But then again I would loose all the space with the divider and the extra drawer/rollout material. Hmmm....See MorePantry next to a wall, pull-out or roll-out?
Comments (7)Just to prevent any confusion (I don't care -- this is just for information): "Pullout" is often used for anything that one pulls except a drawer because a drawer already has a name. Therefore there are pullout shelves, pullout pantries, and pullout spice racks. There are pullout cutting boards and pullout tray racks. The only use I personally have seen in my four years of being TKO of "rollout" is in the phrase "Roll Out Tray Shelves (ROTS)", which Buehl taught us to say awhile back. Since it looks like opposite definitions are being used here, I just wanted to clarify. That said, I think door-attached pullouts (or whatever you want to call them) are great for areas that are too small to usefully make a cabinet. That's a maximum of 15" wide, and more like 8"-12". For a pantry, even at 15", I prefer individual pullout/rollout shelves to either a door mounted unit or drawers. You can see from the front, you can see from above, you can see from the side(s). I have an undercounter pullout with two door mounted levels that holds bread, cereal and other breakfast/snack stuff. Love that. Too narrow a space for anything else (tray storage elsewhere). You can see and get to everything, but there's no need to reach across much. Only two packages, if they're narrow, sit side by side. Good stuff! Two doors don't bother me given the ability to see into a pantry (that's what I have), and I like wider than narrower, though that isn't at issue here. You can get a single door with 15"-18". One member--Circuspeanut? I forget--has narrow pullout trays but no doors. Looks cool in her kitchen. :)...See MorePull-Out Pantry Doors vs Roll-Out Shelves
Comments (4)I agree with you- I think pullout shelves are better. Though, unfortunately I can't tell you from personal experience, as my carpenter is telling me that they will be delivered tomorrow morning first thing- (if I had a dime for every time he's promised delivery- been waiting since February!) Anyhow, I do have the pantry pullout on one side of my floor to ceiling cupboards (have 18" cabinets on either side of fridge). I had to get that as I wanted space to hang brooms, mops, vacuum attachments, etc, and I could get a side mount pullout attached to one side, leaving room on the other side. The problem is access, even though it is full extension, you have the shelf above hampering your reach. I guess it's not a problem if you have lots of space between shelves, but then what's the point in that? My pullout shelves will be about 4" deep, with a half circle cutout in front- if they do arrive tomorrow, I can take pics- I am SO looking forward to having them installed- been using 16" deep shelves in a 24" deep cupboard, pain in the butt to reach to the back to access items. As you can see, shelves made just a little too wide!!!...See Morepull-out pantry vs individual slide out
Comments (17)loves2cookfor6's pull-out is beautiful! I guess it really depends on the space you have available. Full pull-outs only seem useful if they are quite narrow. The beauty of individual pull-outs is that you have access to the items from both sides, FRONT and TOP. I like pulling an item off the shelf without having a shelf above blocking access and light. In my mind, the full pull-out doesn't function much differently from fixed shelves except for giving access to 2 sides. I used to love going into Ikea showrooms and opening the full pull-outs. They were fun and seemed so clever! But when it came time to choose a 15" wide Ikea pantry for our laundry room, I abandoned the full pull-out (which I really thought I wanted) for the practicality of the individual pull-outs. I couldn't think of a single functional reason for getting the full pull-out. In our house, having drawers on the bottom of our kitchen pantry works well since only the bottom drawer is blocked if something is left on the floor in front of the pantry. I keep my most used items in the front of our pantry shelves. I just have to open the cabinet doot to grab one of these items instead of pulling out anything....See Morejohnnyl53
12 years agolithigin
12 years agochrisfoster
12 years agokaysd
12 years agofraker
12 years ago
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