10-25-2016, 10:54 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-25-2016, 11:01 PM by MKepke.
Edit Reason: corrected angle
)
SWMBO wants to expand the countertop space in the kitchen, mostly to use for baking.
We have fairly large neo-angle island in the kitchen now with the typical 50:50 split of conventional cabinets and a raised upper seating area, like this pic:
To limit the $expense, I have convinced SWMBO not to move or replace the island (which contains plumbing, HVAC and electrical) but instead to tear-out the upper seating area, install additional cabinets in-place of the upper seating area and run countertop over the whole thing.
But I can't wrap my mind around what cabinet layout to use for infilling what was the upper seating area - given that the neo-angle design will result in the face-frames of the added cabinets meeting at 225 degrees. With a standard 24" depth cabinet, the 225 degree gap between standard square cabinet carcasses is much too wide to cover with filler strips - they'd be enormous. Like 15" wide edge-to-edge.
I'd prefer to use off-the-shelf cabinets e.g. Conestoga but if there's a 225 degree cabinet - I'm not seeing it. I'm not opposed to making a custom cabinet or two to infill the space but I have no good ideas for the space, design-wise. For example, I thought about putting in a recessed wide filler-strip and sticking a leg/pillar in front of that - just to fill up the dead space and provide some visual interest.
Anybody done this before?
-Mark
We have fairly large neo-angle island in the kitchen now with the typical 50:50 split of conventional cabinets and a raised upper seating area, like this pic:
To limit the $expense, I have convinced SWMBO not to move or replace the island (which contains plumbing, HVAC and electrical) but instead to tear-out the upper seating area, install additional cabinets in-place of the upper seating area and run countertop over the whole thing.
But I can't wrap my mind around what cabinet layout to use for infilling what was the upper seating area - given that the neo-angle design will result in the face-frames of the added cabinets meeting at 225 degrees. With a standard 24" depth cabinet, the 225 degree gap between standard square cabinet carcasses is much too wide to cover with filler strips - they'd be enormous. Like 15" wide edge-to-edge.
I'd prefer to use off-the-shelf cabinets e.g. Conestoga but if there's a 225 degree cabinet - I'm not seeing it. I'm not opposed to making a custom cabinet or two to infill the space but I have no good ideas for the space, design-wise. For example, I thought about putting in a recessed wide filler-strip and sticking a leg/pillar in front of that - just to fill up the dead space and provide some visual interest.
Anybody done this before?
-Mark
If I had a signature, this wouldn't be it.