Help! How to babyproof an open stair case
jodie_a_perry
6 years ago
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Babyproofing Inset Cabinets
Comments (15)We have frameless cabinets, not inset, but I'm pretty sure that what we have will work on any cabinets. Frameless and full overlay framed may be the hardest to get something that works on because if the latch requires opening part way and reaching in to push the latch, the drawer or door needs to pull open past the drawer or counter above. Most of the latches, including some that said that they work on frameless, don't have enough length to allow that. The one that we found that did was too bulky. In the end, we went with the magnetic latches and I think that they would work well on any door or drawer. We were concerned that it would be hard to keep track of where the magnet "keys" were, but it hasn't been and we really like them now. We keep two keys on the sides of our fridge. The stainless front isn't magnetic but the sides are. We keep another on our expresso machine. We put them on more than bill, but sparingly - the under sink cabinet, the cabinet with heavy appliances some of which have blades, a cabinet with pullouts for bottled items (broken glass). We thought about baby proofing the drawers that have sharp knives, but decided to wait and see if the baby showed an interest in them since they were all top drawers. Here is a link that might be useful: Magnetic latches like we used...See Morequestion about casings in openings - please help
Comments (12)NHB, thankyou. I had wanted french doors on this opening for quite some time, but thought it wouldn't work due to not having enough room to open them into the living room. Our doorway was originally 69" wide, so although we knew we would have to reduce it in width, opening 30 or 32 inch doors would never have worked. Walking around Home Depot one time, I spotted a pair of bifold french doors, but the price on them was high for just one pair (I needed two pairs). They were only available through special order. I calculated the cost for the sizes we would need, and thought "yikes", and I let the idea go. Two years later, I again looked at the HD doors on display, and then noticed there were some stacked in the shelves behind the display. Upon asking the clerk, I discovered that they indeed sold them in the store, and that only the ones with beveled glass like the display set were special order. I had hope, finally! We bought the unbeveled glass ones, and these doors cost us less than $400, for the two pairs. Ruth, I love your new floors, and I think your room is looking gorgeous!...See MoreNeed help for long run of leaning and bouncy open stairs
Comments (4)Thank you! We asked the engineer who designed the stairs to take a look. He determined they were not built to spec and were deficient, e.g. stairs did not reflect what he had drawn. The framers had taken some liberties with the design and thought it would be good enough. The engineer designed another solution to work with what they already had in place and they're working on fixing it now. The builder decided to cover the cost of the re-do. Hopefully it won't slow down the other trades already scheduled to come in (sheetrock)....See MoreStair case remodel
Comments (1)The staircase contractor is looking to open your wallet. He has to. Post a picture or two with your ideas and I'll tell you how hard he's gonna spank ya....See Morejodie_a_perry
6 years agodrdeb1234
6 years ago
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