Island in kitchen...cabinet sides exposed or hidden?
7 years ago
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- 7 years ago
- 7 years ago
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Anyone have a working 'back' or hidden kitchen? Pics? Do tell!
Comments (89)Interesting thread! We have two children (~4, ~7) and our current house has an open kitchen into the family room. We all love to cook and my husband and I loathe the open concept. Actually, my Mom complains about it too. The kitchen does have a table and my kids can draw while I'm cooking and help out with smaller tasks. But if they, or my husband, choose to watch TV I notice the TV volume starts increasing the further I get into the meal. If my husband decides to do one of his marathon stews and soups weekends, I find myself reaching for the volume on the remote too. I also find that I will get to a point where I want everyone to leave so I can focus and get stuff done. This is when I tell everyone to go outside and play (including my husband) :) We now eat all dinners in the dining room. I'm one of those people who just can't relax and enjoy the meal when I'm staring at the mess we have to clean up, but this came more from my son, not me. One day he just said, "Why don't we eat in here every day?" and now we do. We're finally breaking ground on a new build next month and have been planning our new house and kitchen for a year and a half. In that time the kitchen has become closed off, the pantry was enlarged, and we got rid of a breakfast room, replacing it with a nook. Like LL pointed out, it was redundant to have a large eating space off the kitchen, island with seating, and dining room - especially since we now use the dining room. We also got rid of our upper cabinets because I want to able to see into the backyard and watch the kids run around while I cook, do dishes, or whatever else it is that seems to keep me in our kitchen more than any other room. Shannonaz: the one thing I've noticed while planning our build, and having it take for freaking ever, is we've been watching things change while they grow. We can ask them to watch a TV show when we're trying to get dinner finished and just need some space. They set the table for us so that keeps them occupied too. Two years ago, was a different story. Since they both have an interest in cooking, I also imagine they will become more involved in the actually preparation as they get older. So my point is, while it's hard to imagine your kids a few years from now, it's better to plan for the future abilities bc the toddler years fly by, and way too fast! Lastly, if I could have a "second kitchen" it would be sound proof so I could hear nothing else in the house, would lock from the inside, have a comfy chair, a toaster oven, coffee maker, small fridge with sparkling water, wine, assorted cheeses, and I'd lock myself in there and "cook" with a book once a day! :)...See MoreHidden Gems
Comments (63)I love this thread! I don't have anything to show yet, but a few things I am doing that I am really excited about are: - A custom baking cart/mini-island that rolls out from under my huge island and also acts as a cooling rack. I had the width made to fit standard half sheet and quarter sheet baking pans, with a drawer to hold baking items. With the baking pans on the racks below, I can also use it to store additional items like rolling pins and stuff. I plan to store my hand mixer on the bottom shelf. This is my compromise because I couldn't change my layout to accommodate a dedicated baking station. It's not done yet, but here is a photo of the inspiration cart (sorry so blurry) and next to it my unfinished cart where I'm stacking pans right now because I took down my pot rack for the remodel. To be done - paint, countertop, installation of metal racks along the long side: - I am having a pantry cabinet/fridge surround built and am converting the otherwise empty space on the sides that would be taken up with molding into very shallow cabs. On one side, I plan to store my spices, meds and other narrow items. On the pantry side, I made the shelves deeper and will use it as a message center and charging station. I'm also planning on painting the inside doors with magnetic paint for our magnet collection and to act as a message board. DH and kids are messy, so hoping to hide stuff behind cab doors. :-) 1st pic: Message center /charging station side. It's going to be wired for electrical and our LAN so we can install a flat PC or laptop too. 2nd pic: Spice rack side, also wired for electrical. Ideas I stole from this forum - Plugmolds under the wall cabs and under one side of the island so I have a clean backsplash with only outlets on the two far ends where there will be small ap*pliances in front. DH worked really hard to do this! - Island outlet behind a false front cab drawer. - Making fridge surround deeper so my fridge didn't stick out. - Too many others to remember! Ideas I want to do but need to figure out how - - A folding stool or Kik step somewhere accessible but not in the way for short me. - Knife organizer in a drawer or somewhere....See MoreExposed hinge finish question
Comments (5)I think the exposed hinges will look most authentic for your kitchen. You have a lot of drawers so it will not be as busy as if it were mostly doors. The countertops are soapstone on the perimeter so I think black would be fine. In essence I feel you are trading a heavily patterned floor in the picture below for a heavily patterned backsplash in your kitchen, so it's a sort of update and reworking of the real thing. Below, the hardware is probably chrome or nickel but I am afraid that might fall a little flat on the yellow cabinets....See MoreHELP! Awkward placement of kitchen stove vent into exposed beam roof
Comments (6)This forum has an irrational hatred of stoves in an island. I feel more ambivalent about this solution. It depends a lot on the layout of the kitchen. There are situations where it clearly is inappropriate. But I have also seen stoves in an island that worked amazingly well. It's fun to have Teppanyaki inspired cooking right in front of your guests. Friends of mine have that, and it works great! Venting a freestanding range is much trickier though. In traditional kitchens, the upper side cabinets and the backsplash function as guides for the air that is being vented. Without these guides, the hood has to be a lot more powerful and has to have a bigger capture area. And that of course increases the need for an expensive make up air (MUA) system. Alternatively, you could contemplate a downdraft system. But you should realize that downdraft never works particularly well. It works a little better for induction cooktops (instead of gas). But it's always inferior to an overhead hood. I wouldn't recommend it for an open floor plan. These are all decisions that have to be made in a conversation with an experienced kitchen designer, as they have other implications for the rest of the kitchen layout....See MoreRelated Professionals
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