Quartz gap wall to counter
Nicole Johnson
5 years ago
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Nicole Johnson
5 years agoThe Kitchen Place
5 years agoRelated Discussions
What to do w/ ugly gap 'tween new quartz countertop and tile
Comments (4)I have just one suggestion for you. Make them come back and do it right!! Seriously....they should have templated so that there would not be a large gap between the tile and the counter top. How large is the gap? The gap on the underside might not have been avoidable, depending on how out of level the cabinets were. But it could have been caulked so you can't see through it....See MoreGap between quartz countertop and subtop
Comments (2)I'll bet the problem started with your cabinets being installed out of level. The countertop installer shimmed between the plywood and the estone to compensate. He doesn't want a callback that one side of the range is higher or lower than the other. As long as he didn't span too far between shims, it's not a problem....See MoreI'm so frustrated! Quartz counter-top installation problems again
Comments (51)Here are a some pics and my dilemma. Keep in mind this is my old fridge...new one comes today! Here is how we ended up with this: I have never had an enclosed fridge so didn't think about the peninsula dying into panels or how deep panels were going to be. I "semi" designed the new footprint and took it to Lowe's where the KD took over. (yes---I know......) Bought Schuler plywood with maple fronts cabinets. Although the kitchen designer had the model number of the fridge we were buying, which is a full-size, she designed the kitchen with 24" deep panels. She knew I was trying to have the look of an enclosed fridge. Being that I've never had an enclosed fridge, it was something I just didn't think of until the install started. Evidently she put a counter-depth in the design program because the elevation sketches she gave me showed an enclosed fridge. "Luckily" the panels actually came in wrong and were cut at only 23" for some strange reason and the installer caught it right away when looking over everything. Otherwise he probably would have installed them and I would be stuck. So called Lowe's to reorder the panels and somehow in all this it suddenly dawned on me that a full size fridge was going to be deeper and require deeper panels. I thought "no problem! Yay I can order them at 30!" By this time the KD had quit her job due to the pandemic. The other KD didn't know what was going on so we called in the Schuler rep. She was the one who immediately told me that those 30" panels would be sticking out in front of the peninsula. She asked if we could move the peninsula forward since the other side is an overhang for seating, but we couldn't since it would bottleneck the entrance into the kitchen down to under 36" and getting rid of an existing bottleneck was one of the reasons for the re-design to start with. So we had a dilemma. We cannot go down to a counter depth fridge which was the other option. What I decided was to split the difference and order 27" refrigerator panels. The fridge without doors is 29.5" so I will have about 3" of the side of the fridge sticking out which I don't like, but while I want my kitchen to look beautiful, I value the functionality too. The old fridge that you see in the pic sticks out a total of 32" The new fridge will stick out 34 with doors but without handles (4.5" of that is doors that would stick out anyway) Here's the really complicated part....we will be installing decorative panels on the end of the fridge as we have them on all the cabinets. This is how you enter the kitchen and I don't want that big blank space there next to the peninsula. The panels should be installed with just 1/4" reveal. I posted a photo below of how the panels look that are already installed on the side of the pantry that adjoins to a 17" high window seat. Luckily those face the opposite way from the fridge panels so you will never see both at the same time. I also posted photos of us holding up panels on the side of the fridge (they are NOT the right size panels...we have to order those still---we just used these to look at the right edge as to how wide to make the panels.) Also keep in mind we can remove the quartz backsplash piece if that would look better. That was not originally planned...the panels were going to sit directly on top of the countertop. So do we order the panels with just the 1/4" reveal to match the panels in the rest of the kitchen? Or, as the Schuler rep recommended, order the panels so they are the same width with the countertop, leaving about 1 3/4" reveal on the right side, but then your eye follows the countertop all the way up. I asked the countertop templater guy if I should just lengthen the overhang on the kitchen side of the peninsula to 2.5" to bring it out to within 1/4" of the fridge panel but he said no....I'm now thinking I should have insisted on it. Especially since we have full overlay cabinets that already make the overlay look very small since the 1.5" planned overhang is measured from the box, not the front of the drawers. Note how small the overhang looks to the drawers. And then of course, they had templated for a 1.5" overhang and I only got 1.25" UGH! Every quarter inch there would have made the reveal on the side of the fridge less. Suggestions appreciated! I'm hoping that I will eventually make peace in my mind with this issue and won't notice it but it is driving me crazy right now. I think of all the things that screwed up just because of this one error by the KD that I didn't catch and I am beating myself up for it!...See MoreQuartz Countertop raw cut uneven gap with wall
Comments (18)They left. After epoxy touchup, they re-caulked. It's not perfect because they are installers not artists, but definitely less of an eyesore. The process took them less than an hour. Everyone is happier. I really don't understand all the comments to "move on" or "get over it", etc... do you have such low standards for your fabricators/installers that it's perfectly fine they don't cut in straight lines when that is probably one of the easier parts in their job description. This was their being lazy and sloppy. If the gap had been even all the way through top to bottom, I wouldn't have had an issue with it. In any case, my question was: How can this be fixed? I was asking for possible solutions, not for opinions on whether or not I should accept this installation and get over it or not. I am asking for solutions because obviously I cannot "get over it" because it's my cooking counter and something I have to look at several times a day. If you are perfectly fine with curved rough cuts in your own installs, good for you. If you do not know any possible fixes, that's fine too. But it is completely unhelpful to be dismissive and not even answer the question. And look, it turns out that there are at least 2 possible ways to provide cosmetic fixes to this problem, and done in less than an hour! And obviously if they had done their job the first time, they would not have had to return to repair it....See MoreNicole Johnson
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