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larahale

Effed-up kitchen counter install — whose fault is this?

larahale
2 years ago

Apologies in advance: This is half venting, and half asking for advice.


We are in the midst of updating our 1955 midcentury modern home, retaining and restoring as many original details as possible—including the kitchen cabinets.


We hired a local countertop fabricator to replace the 80s laminate the previous owners had installed with quartz. The same owners also had installed a 36" cooktop over a 30" floor cabinet, and had cut into the interior of the drawer beside that cabinet in order to accommodate the too-large cooktop.


When the sales reps came to our home to give an estimate, I pointed this out to them—remarking on the stupid thing the previous owners had done to the drawer—and told them that we had ordered a new cooktop that was 30", the proper size for the cabinet.


They actually insisted that they would not send the template maker out to do the official measurements until our new sink and cooktop had arrived he could physically look at them to ensure he got the precise measurements and angles he needed to create the template.


When the template maker arrived, he set about doing his thing, only occasionally popping up his head to ask us a question. The template was sent over that evening with all the details like overhang, material, color, edge shape, etc. as well simple drawings and their terms and conditions. It all looked right to us, so we signed and waited to hear from them on the install.


When the pieces were installed two weeks later, there were several little issues with the quality of the work they'd done, including one counter having a slightly deeper overhang than the others. But the one glaring error is that THEY DID NOT CENTER THE COOKTOP OVER THE CABINET BELOW. (photo attached)


When we reached out to office, they said they'd check into it and then sent us an email to say that they had placed the new 30" cooktop exactly where the old inappropriately sized 36" one was, based on the center of the old countertop. They told us that it is their "policy" to place new appliances in the exact position of the old appliances in retrofitted designs. (No such "policy" was ever stated to us, nor is it in the template document.) They argue that, if we wanted the new 30" cooktop to be centered over the 30" cabinet below, it was our responsibility to specifically tell them that. Our position is that it is standard practice—not to mention common sense—to center a cooktop over the cooktop cabinet and that we had absolutely no reason to think that professional installers would need to be told this. Also, if that is their "policy," why was it not mentioned at any point during the process—when the estimators came, when the template maker came, when the template was sent for sign off? All you have to do is scroll through Houzz to see is *extremely* unusual that anyone would ever place a cooktop off-center of the cabinet below—in such a rare, specific case, would you not make a special point of telling the client it would be off-center and asking if that was their preference??


We believe this entirely their fault; the templater/fabricator messed up and they don't want to admit it. They are not willing to redo the work at their expense, and they are not even offering a discount if we were willing to pay them to correct their mistake. We've been arguing this point with them for more than a month now (we paid half up front and have been withholding the balance pending resolution), and if anything they are digging their heels in deeper each time.


Who screwed up here? I'd especially love to hear perspective from kitchen designers or countertop installers.




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