Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Kitchen Design Information to improve Your Space For Storage and Efficiency, But Reduce Your Kitchen Size

Being an Architect, I attempt to make use of the good way of design to create a house more effective and well useful for the sq footage. In the following paragraphs, I am coping with kitchen design, and just how to really make it more effective being used and storage, allow it to be feel more open than the usual standard kitchen, but get it done inside a more compact size (sq footage is expensive).

I'm a large believer within the "Open LayoutInch that has less walls and doorways, with rooms tied together as open visual space. Keeping the Living Room, Dining Area and Kitchen "open" (meaning no walls together) help to make each room "feel bigger". The wall removal helps facilitate outdoors communications between your rooms. You do not feel isolated in the kitchen area when wall obstacles are removed, and therefore people do not have to walk into your kitchen to speak to you. They are able to get it done from outdoors your kitchen zone.

Keep the roofs tall by investing in scissors trusses. You may make your walls 8 feet tall, but with the addition of the scissors truss (peak at 13 to 14 ft) provides you with plenty of visual space along with a less limited feeling. And obtain a skylight in the kitchen area. The outlet for any skylight could be larger compared to skylight itself. Obtain the opening in the peak from the ceiling towards the fringe of the wall, and look for the skylight near a verticle with respect wall therefore it will disperse the sunshine through the kitchen. Put some "niches" inside your tall walls over the 8' line for greenery, or statues. Put "puck" lights during these niches for accent lighting.

Use tall, 2' deep cabinets rather than overhead cabinets. 2 feet deep, 7 feet tall cabinets (or 8 feet tall) are also called kitchen or utility cabinets. With fixed shelves, they hold over 4 occasions just as much stuff being an overhead cabinet. Place a type of tall cabinets along a back wall, and close to the opening towards the kitchen zone. By getting a 2' wide, 2' deep, 7' tall cabinet close to the Kitchen opening (usually near the Diner) it may store all of the glasses, dishes, platters, and bowls that you employ every day. People do not have to go into the kitchen to obtain the tableware to create the table while you would with overhead cabinets.

By utilizing just 3 tall cabinets (2' deep 7' tall) powering your kitchen, and also the open layout, this enables all of the relaxation from the kitchen to possess 36" tall base cabinets and counter tops, without overhead cabinets. Getting rid of overhead cabinets (and also the connected wall) just provides you with an amazing open feeling. Your kitchen is not as as cramped. The home windows and sun light range from home windows from the other rooms and skylights, meaning it's not necessary to waste valuable kitchen surfaces for home windows. Put your sink and cooktop to manage outdoors rooms.

Within the corners from the kitchen, install cabinets at 45 levels towards the adjoining cabinets as opposed to a "blind" cabinet or "lazy susan". While a 45 degree cabinet has some dead space, it utilizes more room than the usual "lazy susan", due to the fact your cabinet shelves and drawers are square, along with a "lazy susan" is round.

Place a kitchen within the corner involving the tall cabinets. It does not need to be very large (4' x 4') and finding yourself in the corner will utilise all the corner "dead" space. The kitchen might have a 2' opening at 45 levels towards the adjoining cabinets. The kitchen walls might be 2x4 presented with drywall or 3/4" MDF, however the wall should not be taller compared to height from the tall cabinets. This enables for crown molding (if you are using it) to also be employed around the kitchen. Possess the kitchen open at the very top, particularly if there's a skylight above, to permit daylight in to the kitchen. Have shelves in the floor to surface of wall. Place a "cabinet door" (just like the relaxation of the tall cabinets) around the kitchen entrance, not really a frame door like you'd use within the bed room. By getting a cabinet door the kitchen, and also the kitchen walls in the same height because the cabinets, the kitchen appears like a cabinet as opposed to a drywall opening.

Within the kitchen, use a counter with 4 electric shops. This is when the coffee machine, toaster, electric can openers, etc should be permanently situated. It keeps them off your kitchen area counter tops, but they're always open to use. You don't need to store them inside your cabinets and no requirement for appliance garage cabinets. This leaves your primary kitchen counter tops "clean" (nothing in it) and much more open for that food prep you must do.

Put a maximum counter 8" above your counter tops (i.e. 6" wall, 2" thick upper counter). Within an "open layoutInch concept, this 8" of height hides a "untidy" counter top from view to another rooms. Additionally, it provides you with lots of space for multiple electric shops within the within the 6" wall areas. The 6" tall wall may be the right height for sixInch ceramic wall tile. Top of the counter is 44" (elbow height) an ideal height for "leaning". This enables your visitors to "lean" around the counter (from the kitchen) and talk to you while you are planning food (in the kitchen area). It is also a great height for serving food or tall stools like a breakfast bar. Not every one of top of the counters need to be the some width. Some sections might be 9" wide (only a the top to the your kitchen partition, while other parts of top of the counter could be 24'' wide, for serving food or like a breakfast bar.

Now...I am talking about this portion last because different clients use their kitchen areas in a different way, and we all have their very own taste. I am not speaking concerning the size (although it's related), but the number of people they need inside a kitchen. Some clients want everybody in the kitchen area, including visitors and relatives, to aid in cooking or processing your food, meaning a bigger kitchen to handle people. Others do not want anybody but a couple of individuals kitchen, so they are not stumbling over people to obtain the meal finished, meaning a more compact more effective kitchen.

Most contemporary house designs possess the kitchen available to the garage or rear door and available to living room and/or any other rooms for example breakfast areas, dining rooms, or hallways. What this means is your kitchen has multiple openings to deal with these characteristics. Some kitchen areas also provide "island" cabinets/counter tops with several openings. All of the openings towards the kitchen enables individuals to are available in, stand around, or go through your kitchen from Point A to suggest B elsewhere in the home. Also, among the eccentricities in our human psychology is everybody eventually eventually ends up in the kitchen area. This design uses your kitchen like a "traffic corridor". These kitchen areas need a lot of space to handle amount of traffic. Again, some clients love the flow of individuals interior and exterior your kitchen. They simply require a bigger kitchen space for those this happen

Other clients think the "traffic corridor" kitchen concept "clogs" in the kitchen with unnecessary and undesirable people. Count me within the "keep-the-unnecessary-people-out-of-the-kitchen" category. I love to keep your kitchen open and welcoming, I simply do not want the additional physiques as the meal has been prepared. By continuing to keep the additional physiques out, your kitchen could be more compact and much more efficient, meaning less steps between your refrigerator, cooktop and sink.

Keeping people from the kitchen is extremely simple to do inside your design, simply make it hard to allow them to enter. Make use of a wrapping counter top with only one (1) counter top opening in to the kitchen, and look for that opening in the most challenging place to go in your kitchen. This, together with the "open layoutInch is the best way to avoid undesirable kitchen traffic. The only kitchen entrance will psychologically prevent them from entering your kitchen zone, as the open layout (no walls) enables you to talk with family and visitors, and keep them from the kitchen.

Using the information I have talked about above by keeping the folks from a kitchen, a kitchen size 16'x10' or 12'x12' is extremely effective, with a lot of storage. Making your kitchen a "traffic corridor" for individuals to feed, your kitchen will have to double in dimensions, and you are not attaining space for storage with this size because all of the openings towards the kitchen are eating up what might have been employed for cabinets.

When it comes to lighting, most kitchen areas possess a couple of primary method of lighting (or mixture of these)

A. Light within the ceiling fan
B. "Can" lights within the ceiling
C. Under-cabinet lighting (usually puck lights or fluorescent strips)

I generally reject many of these lighting concepts. Having a light within the ceiling fan, a person always has the sunshine at the back, meaning you are casting shadows onto all you do around the counter top. Can lighting is "energy hogs" simply because they cut large holes inside your insulation, and employ inefficient incandescent lighting (usually 75 watt). I do not use overhead cabinets therefore eliminate under-cabinet lighting, that is sometimes costly

Using the tall roofs of the scissors truss, I love to use MR16 adjustable light fittings, not "can" lights. The MR16's are often termed as "strip" lighting. However, you will want to make use of a "plate" rather than a "strip" for that fixture connection. Using a plate, the MR16 utilizes a standard electrical box, so a more compact hole inside your insulation blanket in comparison to some "can" light, plus they generate two times just as much light at a lower price wattage (usually 50 w) than the usual "can" light. MR16 fittings can be quite small (which means you aren't seeing them) and not so pricey (around ). MR16's are adjustable, meaning you are able to point the sunshine in which you need it. A "can" light points light verticle with respect towards the ceiling. Inside a sloped ceiling, that isn't good. Locate your lights over the counter top to get rid of shadows, along your major work areas (sinks, cooktop, cutting and prep areas) after which distribute evenly across the relaxation from the counter tops. You actually have no need for lights elsewhere apart from for accent lighting. The lights over the counters could be more than enough, presuming you are keeping your kitchen more compact.

If you wish to take a look at some good examples, you can check out this site http://youngarchitectureservices.com/home-architect-indiana.html and then click the floor plans, and focus around the cooking area. You will find also pictures of kitchen within the "Interior Planning" portion of the website. Bigger scale pictures of the kitchen are situated around the "WebpageInch under "View More House Photos"

Speak with you later,
John

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