Help with walk in pantry design for new build
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New build farmhouse kitchen with fireplace, help with design!
Comments (12)I played with your plan a wee bit, turning the laundry room and baking pantry on their sides and moving your kitchen appliances around quite a bit. =) Both laundry room and baking pantry are wider in this plan, which means that you have better aisles in both spaces. I didn't realize until I working on your plan how narrow your baking pantry was. If you were spec'ing standard depth counters & cabs along one wall and 12" cabs on the other, you're left with less than 29" for the aisle. That's fine if you don't intend to work in their but since it sounds like you want to do baking prep in here, that's not going to work well at all, especially if you want your kids to help you. My plan does mean no window in your laundry room but you could always add clerestory windows between baking pantry and laundry room to let light flow from one to the other, like they did between spaces in this home. Okay, into the kitchen. I removed the wing walls on each side of the dining area so that you're not pinched for space around the table. However, as I wrote above, if you want to keep the walls, you can bump the space out instead. I moved the fridge out of the corner and against the pantry wall. That puts it close to your baking center; shorter walks to get eggs, butter, etc. I moved your clean up sink and 2 DWs to the wall next to the fridge. Here are inspiration pics for sinks against walls, not under windows. Moving the clean-up zone, opened up space to move the range top and hood to an exterior wall. Since you're concerned about noise, you should definitely look into adding an remote blower to your hood. This runs ducting up the exterior wall to your roof where your blower will sit. You'll cut noise quite a bit. I moved the ovens to right next to the baking pantry door so it's an shorter walk with pans of batter. I added a prep sink to your island to give you a good work zone between pantry, fridge and range top. The downside of this plan is that it puts the clean-up sink and dish storage the farthest from the dining area. It also means that anyone wanting to grab last minute items from the fridge to bring to the table will walk through the cook zone. Not ideal but I can't think of another way to address that at the moment. Oh, the other thing I did was recess the full depth fridge into the pantry wall so that it appears to be counter depth. I've no idea what your aisle widths were because you hadn't marked them but you have a large enough space to go for generous 48" aisles....See MoreNew Build - Walk In Kitchen Pantry Entrance - Where should it be
Comments (3)What are your plans for the sink in the pantry? If you move the door, you'll need to rotate the sink 180°, so you can put storage where the swing door was - otherwise you're wasting a lot of space. Is that a freezer in the upper right corner of the pantry? If so, make sure the door opens on the left (or move it to the lower right corner). Your aisle width between island and range looks good, but the other two aisles look pretty tight - especially by the fridge. How does the kitchen relate to the rest of the house? What room faces the pantry (as shown)? If you had a barn door there, would you feel like you needed to close it all the time, to hide the pantry? If you are in and out of the pantry a lot, that might get old. A pocket door between kitchen and pantry could be left open, and you'd only see into the pantry from the kitchen itself....See MoreWalk in Pantry - Shelf Design Help
Comments (11)I would take a tape measure and look at the condiments you purchase.. When it comes to shallow shelving I usually tell my customers to base it around soup cans... it seems to be a good size to cover most things. Also plan on those shallow shelves on the right to only be putting things in plastics containers just in case you bump against them walking in - that is why I had suggested hanging mops and brooms below and doing the shelves higher. Or maybe find something like this As far as the deeper shelves in the back, I was thinking of bulk storage. The closet is 6 1/2 feet deep - with 24" shelves there still is 4 1/2 feet to walk into it. Bundles of paper towels, bins of pet food, crock pots, lobster pot etc... but you can do whatever works for the items you need to store in there... it doesn't matter what we think. Take inventory and plan.. Best of luck!!...See MoreNeed help squeezing in a powder room in new build design!
Comments (42)@ Kyla YES. You can, I took a little bit of the bedroom walk in closet, you don't need a "hall " to the bedroom, and it is VERY easy to stack a washer/dryer when using front load appliances I can not perfect it. I could if it could be printed to scale, but I'm not inclined to make a trip to the vast copier, nor to scale this to perfection. Pleas. Go BACK to your arch, the one you paid, , and challenge him to do a better job. Nobody with this size home doesn't have a dedicated powder room. It's a bad value, whether YOU think you need it or anyone else here thinks "it's just fine" to get by without one. A horse and buggy can get you anywhere within reason. Doesn't mean you would not prefer the automobile....See MoreRelated Professionals
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