Today's kitchens are often the heart of the home. Therefore, careful
planning is required to ensure a kitchen that's both beautiful and highly
functional. Here are 20 tips to consider when designing your kitchen.
1. Eliminate wasted
steps. Think about how and where you use items.
Store breakfast foods and bowls near the breakfast table. Keep wraps and
plastic containers in one handy spot near a work surface for wrapping
leftovers. Locate dishware and flatware near the dishwasher to ease the process
of unloading.
2. Design wide
walkways. Paths throughout a kitchen should be at least
36 inches wide. Paths within the cooking zone should be 42 inches wide for a
one-cook kitchen and 48 inches wide for a two-cook configuration. When
planning, adjust kitchen islands and peninsulas accordingly.
3. Direct traffic. For
kid-friendly kitchen designs, keep the cooktop out of traffic areas so children
don't catch handles and cause spills when running through. Also, make the
refrigerator accessible to both passersby and people working in cooking and
cleanup areas.
4. Stay clear of
corners. To make cabinet and appliance doors fully
functional, plan space for the door's clearance and swing direction in your
kitchen design. Keep appliances away from corners, and make sure doors won't
bang into each other if open at the same time.
5. Find the right
height for the microwave. The correct height and
location for a microwave oven may vary depending on the chef or the
kid-friendly character of the kitchen. For adults, 15 inches above countertop
level is a good microwave height. For kids, a below-countertop setup may be
safer and more suitable.
6. Determine the
island's function. When it comes to kitchen islands, form
follows function. If you want to cook and eat on kitchen islands, plan enough
space so the cooktop is safely separated from the dining area.
7. Plan landing space. When
designing your kitchen, allow 15 inches of countertop on each side of a cooktop
and refrigerator. Landing space is also important near the microwave.
8. Consider the
countertops. Chefs who like to cook require more counter
space -- ideally between the range and sink -- than those who cook infrequently
or who prepare simple meals. In addition, incorporating two countertop heights
makes baking easier and helps kids who are involved in meal preparations.
9. Double up. A
second microwave oven and a mini refrigerator or refrigerator drawer positioned
at the edge of the kitchen work centre can keep snackers out of the cook's way.
Add a snack bar with stools for an after-school spot for the kids.
10. Arrange the range. Place
a shelf beside or behind the range to keep cooking oils, utensils, and spices
handy. Place S-hooks on the side of the range hood to hang frequently used pots
and pans.
11. Fill it up. Tired
of lugging water-filled pots from the sink to the cooktop? A swing-out tap --
also called a pot-filler -- installed near the cooktop fills pots near where
you heat them. Or you can install an extra-long hose attachment on your main
faucet to fill pots on the cooktop.
12. be sharp when
storing knives. Hang knives on a magnetic strip tacked to the
backsplash. This makes it easy to spot the right knife for a job and keeps
dangerous items out of children's reach.
13. Make recycling
easy. Equip a cabinet with separate containers for
glass, plastic, and metal. A spare drawer could hold old newspapers.
14. Think short. Put
kids' favorite dishes and snack foods on shelves they can reach.
15. Add a message centre. Establish
a message centre near the kitchen telephone. Put a bulletin board, chalkboard,
or whiteboard on the wall, and store a calendar, notebook, and writing utensils
in a nearby drawer.
16. Plug it in. Install
multiple outlets along the backsplash and on the island so you'll have
electricity wherever you need it.
17. Cut cleaning time. Careful
design decisions make cleaning easier. Glass refrigerator shelves catch spills
that wire shelves let through. Flush-set or undermount sinks don't have a
crumb-catching rim to worry about. Matte finishes don't show dirt as much as
glossy ones do.
18. Break up cabinetry
blocks. Avoid boring, heavy blocks of doors and
drawers by adding interesting details such as glass doors and display shelving.
Or try wine storage or windows.
19. Use light colors
in a small kitchen. Dark color schemes shrink an
already small space and make it less inviting. Use soft shades on kitchen
cabinets and natural light to visually expand a small room.
20. Find a focal
point. Splashy tile, fancy floors, sizable range
hoods, bright kitchen cabinets, and busy countertop patterns give the eye too
much to look at. Pick one focal point in your kitchen design and complement
that area with a few other quieter, eye-catching details.




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