Planning Your Kitchen ? Getting the Right Fit

Planning Your Kitchen ? Getting the Right Fit

Like tailoring for a ‘fitted jacket’ a fitted kitchen is planned, built, and/or fixed to properly fill or cover a specific space and shape. In this case, the space is the heart of your home, the kitchen. To achieve a pleasing, functional, and affordable design it is important to find the appropriate measure of planning, creative foresight, and implementation techniques to ensure success with your project. Whether the target for your fitted kitchen is London, Los Angeles or Lisbon, let’s consider these aspects:

Kitchen Blueprint

The first critical step to building your kitchen design plan is having precise dimensions and understanding the layout of the space you are ultimately looking to build or to fit.

Like our human body, we can’t change the shape without major reconstruction, so if knocking and rebuilding walls is not in the cards for your new kitchen, expect to work with the existing shape. The most common spaces are classified as L-Shape, Galley, U-Shape, and G-Shape.

L-Shape: As the name suggests, your kitchen layout is in the shape of an L with cupboards and worktops on two sides and a corner. Use of a carousel in the corner is important to minimize loss of functional space.
Galley: A galley kitchen layout means two parallel counter surfaces usually running the length of the kitchen.
U-Shape: Again, as the name suggest, this layout is in the shape of a U and typically combines the L-Shape and Galley. The U Shape has cupboards and workspace on three adjoining sides.
G-Shape: With space usually at a premium, a G Shape layout has work surfaces on two walls and a third coming off at an angle.

In addition to the shape or layout, it’s really important to understand the special relationship between the three classic kitchen workflows. Sometimes referred to as the kitchen triangle, the three points of the workflow or action are 1) sink, 2) stove/oven, and 3) refrigerator. A well designed kitchen will permit the cook to move unimpeded between these three points within a short distance.

Shape and layout needs to be accompanied with precision dimensions. Knowing the size of appliances is only a small portion of completing your kitchen’s blueprint. Measuring a room incorrectly is the most common cause for fitting problems. Quality fitted kitchens will utilize every inch within the kitchen and like a good recipe, plans for the right ingredients.

Measure twice, cut once – When in doubt, leave it to the experts to get the final measurements but start with an outline and know the boundaries of your kitchen space. Remember to include height along with length and depth. Just as your walls are most likely not straight, plumb, or square, neither is your ceiling likely to be level.
Windows – If you are lucky to have one or many, do they open in or out, slide up or down? Make sure the window is not obstructed by a faucet or competes with the height of an appliance.
Furniture and Free-Standing Islands – Like the built-in portion of your kitchen, if you have space to include movable items like table and chairs, or free-standing work islands, know these dimensions so they can also be incorporated into your kitchen blueprint.
Taps & Outlets – It’s so much easier to plan this right the first time, rather than to refit a mistake. Like planning the placement of your appliances, account for the measurements and spacing of water taps, waste disposal, electrical sockets, ventilation, fuse boxes, and gas inlet valves, just to name a few.

Kitchen Spice

Having the gift of creative foresight means the ability to visualize the final product before it is completed. It’s like a chef knowing the spices needed for that special recipe. Creative foresight means selecting countertops, wood finishes, cabinets, flooring, and even door handles in the right colors and textures to pull off that picture-perfect new kitchen. For a lot of people, this could spell disaster. Fortunately it’s easy to seek professional help to ensure your new kitchen fits your lifestyle, space, and budgetary guidelines.

Kitchen Clean-up

The least favorite part of any great meal is the clean-up. And the final part of implementing your fitted kitchen blueprint is a thorough review of your design, budget, building code adherence, and construction schedule. Other questions which come to mind might include:

Single or multiple kitchen suppliers?
Product sourcing?
Order and delivery times?
Coordination of product delivery and installation scheduling?
Removal of construction debris, old appliances, etc.?
Single or multiple installers?
Contingent plans for delays?

Like so many things in life, there may not be a right way or wrong way to implement your complete fitted kitchen. Know your strengths and be conscious of your limits. Let the costly mistakes be minimized, hire professionals to help you execute on your dream space, rather than find yourself ‘fit to be tied!’

Make The Most Of Your Kitchen Redesign

Make The Most Of Your Kitchen Redesign

Your family spends considerable time in your kitchen and you want to make the most of that time together. A kitchen redesign can help you do that, but how can you ensure the new layout of your kitchen is one that is functional, inviting and livable? These tips can help you make the most of your kitchen redesign project.

1. Start online with a kitchen cabinet provider that offers a kitchen design tool. This tool will allow you to preplan your kitchen layout and see exactly what the finished room will look like before you shell out major dollars on a design that doesn’t work for you. If something doesn’t appeal to you, try again. Kitchen redesigning is as simple as a few computer mouse clicks. Mill’s Pride offers a free kitchen design tool at http://www.millspride.com/getstarted/kitchentoolintro.cfm

2. Consider what other activities will take place in your kitchen besides meal preparation and eating? Will your kids be using it to do their homework while you cook? If so, a center island might enhance the bonding experience.

3. Do you need extra kitchen storage space? Then consider a built-in pantry with rollout shelves, a drawer base cabinet, oven cabinets and lazy susans

4. Evaluate your personal style and build it in to your kitchen redesign. Are you a fine china collector? Then opt of glass-paned cabinet doors to show off your collection. Decorative touches like crown mouldings and cabinet finishes also reflect your interior design personality.

A kitchen redesign is an expensive proposition, but it’s also an investment in your home and family togetherness. Make those dollars count. With a little planning and ingenuity, you can make your kitchen redesign project one that you and your family be pleased with and proud of for years to come.

Have the Discipline to Prepare a Timetable for Your Kitchen Remodel Before You Start!

Have the Discipline to Prepare a Timetable for Your Kitchen Remodel Before You Start!

A remodeling timetable or schedule will help you co-ordinate your renovation. It is very easy to fall behind schedule unless you plan ahead and get things as organised
as possible. Then long delays between actions are avoided. The best thing to do is to buy a planner that shows at least a week at a glance.

Then make yourself an overview of when you think all of the following will need to be done. Don’t worry! It’s not too hard to do if you can first decide on what exactly has to be done, and approximately how long it will take to do.  

Depending upon the extent of your renovation, there will be tradespeople, contractors, delivery of products and materials to be co-ordinated in the right sequence.
For example, you wouldn’t do the tiling before installing the cabinets. (Would you?!)

This remodeling plan may help you to check that everything is considered in time for the next stage of the remodeling. As far as time needed goes, you will have to make an educated guess after talking to your contractors. If you overestimate the time a little, you won’t be in a position of having to put off contractors because the previous job isn’t complete.

 Preliminary Planning Stage:

1.  Decide on whether you’ll do this yourself, or engage a designer.

2.  Research the cost and types of appliances, countertops, cabinets (pre-made and custom-built), flooring, lights, sinks and faucets, backsplashes, paint.

3.  Decide on any reconstruction work (walls, windows) and price materials and labor. If you are going to tear walls down and extend, or put in new plumbing, you may well have to apply for building approvals from your local Council. This will take time, too. (Go to the Council website and find out whether you need approvals or not.)

4.  Decide on design, layout, style, materials, and fittings. You will need to do a lot of research on the Internet, or go to showrooms to see what is on offer.

5.  Ask contractors to come and give quotes and advice about the work you want them to do. Get at least 3 quotes for each type of job you want done.

6.  Consider your needs as opposed to your wants and draw up a budget. Keep a ‘wis-list’ so that you can come back to this if possible.

7.  Add  about 25% of your remodeling budget on top of the original budget for a  buffer against ‘unforeseens’. And there will be unforeseens, trust me!

8.  Set up a place to act as your kitchen while the renovations are progressing. If you fail to plan for this, you may go insane before the remodel is anywhere near complete!

9.  Buy appliances, sink, faucets. Order cabinets and island, light fixtures, tiles or other backsplash, flooring and paint. Check the sales advertised and also keep an eye out for adverts in the local paper.

10. Keep a log of ALL expenditure on remodeling your kitchen. Expenses have a tendency to start spiraling out of control unless noted with strict disipline, and then you won’t have the necessary money to complete your remodel.

 Remodeling Stage:

1.  Remove everything from old kitchen and set up in temporary one.

2.  Remove all from old kitchen. This includes pulling up and lifting carpet, tiles, appliances, cabinets, racks, hooks, rails, etc.

3.  Get local not-for-profit agencies to come and take everthing away for recycling or distributing.

4.  Do reconstruction work.

5.  Get plasterer to finish off cornices etc.

6.  Clean and dust. Remove grime.

7.  Paint the ceiling…undercoat and outercoats.

8.  Leave lights in place until near the end so that you can see to work.

9.  Install cabinets, sink, faucets, appliances (oven, cooktop, dishwasher) and island.

10. Fill and sand walls if needed.

11. Undercoat walls.

12. Get plumber and electrician in to connect appliances and sink,lighting, make new powerpoints, and internet connections.

13. Tile or affix backsplash.

14. Protect cabinets while giving walls final coats of paint.

15. Do the floor – sand and polish timber, lay tiles, cork, linoleum, rubber etc.

16. Add cabinet hardware.

17. Pay your tradespeople and contractors on time.

 The Conclusion

1. Move everything back into your new kitchen.

2. Buy seating and other accessories.

3. Put the warrantees and instruction manuals away safely.

4. Tally up expenditure and compare with budget set.

If you follow a remodeling timetable like this one, you’ll find life a lot easier! And now you can relax, heave a sigh of relief and thoroughly enjoy your beautiful new kitchen!
And plan the next one ?!


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