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Published byDorothy Leonard Modified over 9 years ago
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Kitchen Basics Planning and trends
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Kitchens are... Considered the control center most lived in room of the house most often remodeled strong selling feature 10% of the value of the home remodeling cost 20,000 - 80,000
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When planning a kitchen…. Build cabinets to fit the cook 36” high standard 24” deep standard 3” increments Build shelves to fit the supplies Understand anthropometrics
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Reach Limits
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Four Kitchen Layouts One Wall (pullman or strip) Corridor ( galley) L- shaped U-shaped
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Work Centers Primary work centers Cook Center Refrigerator Center Sink Center Secondary work center Mix center Serving center
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Work Triangle Developed in the 1950’s used to evaluate the efficiency of a kitchen plan. A line is drawn from the center of the sink to the center of the cooking surface to the center of the refrigerator and then back to the sink. These points are the three major centers of activity. Today’s kitchens often have more than one triangle
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Doorway and walkway clearances Doorways should be at least 32” wide and not more than 24” deep in the direction of travel. Walkways (passages between vertical objects greater than 24” deep in the direction of travel, where not more than one is a work counter or appliance) should be at least 36” wide.
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Work aisles clearances Work aisles (passages between vertical objects, both of which are work counters or appliances) should be at least 42” wide in one-cook kitchens, at least 48” in multiple cook kitchens.
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The work triangle should total 26’ or less with no single leg of the triangle shorter than 4’ nor longer than 9’. The work triangle should not intersect an island or peninsula by more than 12”. The triangle is the shortest walking distance between the refrigerator, primary food preparation sink and primary cooking surface, measured from the center front of each appliance. Work triangle
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Traffic flow should not go through work triangle
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Avoid door interference
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Dishwasher placement
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Kitchen Trends Storage Appliances Styles
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Cabinetry / Storage / Accessories Lazy-Susans Drawer inserts Pantry Tilt-out drawers at sinks Roll-out shelves Tray dividers for baking sheets Recycling/pull out waste baskets Spice Racks
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Storage designed to fit the user
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Tall towers are used to anchor the end of cabinet run. Towers can include drawers below and tray dividers above the built-in appliances.
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Accessible pantry designed for easy access.
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Counter tops, Sinks and Faucets Granite, Concrete, Solid Surface Stainless counters, tile and laminate Farmhouse sinks (apron fronts) Solid surface sinks Three “bowl” sink Wall mounted faucets Pot fillers Faucets “all- in- one” sprayer
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Granite is most popular counter top with an undercount sink. These sinks are easy to wipe off crumbs into the sink because there is no raised edges.
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Solid surfaces create a seamless and contemporary look.
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Concrete Countertops are unique and can be personalized.
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Concrete counter tops with integral sinks.
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Copper farmhouse sinks are very popular and expensive.
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Teak sinks are a beautiful solution for a clean, contemporary kitchen. Pot fillers increase functionality. Touch control faucets
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Appliances
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Appliance Trends Refrigerator drawers Sinks that are dishwashers Dishwasher drawers Refrigerators with internet access Bright colored appliances (Red, Blue, Yellow) Wine chillers Ovens with side opening doors Ovens that cool and operate via phone app
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Wine coolers Espresso machines
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Dishwashing drawers
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Wood panel appliance doors
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Wine racks Warming drawers Lighted cabinets
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New Appliances and trends
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Pull out cutting boards Sink tilt-out Spice racks Plate racks Pull out waste bins
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Kitchen Styles Contemporary Transitional Traditional
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Contemporary
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Transitional
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Traditional
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