06-24-2016, 12:04 PM
A former colleague was using a wire shelving unit to store the Kitchenaid mixer, and assorted other seldom used appliances and supplies. The shelving unit fit into a narrow space that had been left between a floor to almost ceiling cabinet and adjacent wall. But it looked poor and didn't roll out very well, so they asked me if I could build a built-in pull-out pantry type cabinet. They also wanted a 3 drawer base cabinet to go on the other side of the existing cabinet. Sure.
The kitchen is a typical mid-level affair, nothing special. Red oak plywood cabinets, raised panel doors, lacquer finish. The pantry cabinet slide systems I looked at are very expensive; I knew those were out of the question. So I decided to use standard 100 lb load rating side mounted drawer slides, and to mount the top, middle, and bottom shelves to the door. The other pull-out shelves would operate independently.
Here's what they look like:
There will be a cabinet between these two; I just put them together for the photos. The drawer cabinet is a typical arrangement. I made three Baltic birch drawers using 1/2" finger joints, and mounted them with K&V self closing side mounted slides.
Here is the pantry cabinet with the door pulled open:
KV 100 lb self closing slides again. The door is screwed to the drawer boxes and slides quite smoothly. To maximize the width of the shelves I designed them with no lip on the side you load them from (the other side sits against a wall). The face frame is as narrow as I dared go, too. The right side will actually fit over the faceframe of the adjacent cabinet; the left side will be scribed to the wall.
Thanks for looking.
John
The kitchen is a typical mid-level affair, nothing special. Red oak plywood cabinets, raised panel doors, lacquer finish. The pantry cabinet slide systems I looked at are very expensive; I knew those were out of the question. So I decided to use standard 100 lb load rating side mounted drawer slides, and to mount the top, middle, and bottom shelves to the door. The other pull-out shelves would operate independently.
Here's what they look like:
There will be a cabinet between these two; I just put them together for the photos. The drawer cabinet is a typical arrangement. I made three Baltic birch drawers using 1/2" finger joints, and mounted them with K&V self closing side mounted slides.
Here is the pantry cabinet with the door pulled open:
KV 100 lb self closing slides again. The door is screwed to the drawer boxes and slides quite smoothly. To maximize the width of the shelves I designed them with no lip on the side you load them from (the other side sits against a wall). The face frame is as narrow as I dared go, too. The right side will actually fit over the faceframe of the adjacent cabinet; the left side will be scribed to the wall.
Thanks for looking.
John