Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Jack
 
Posts: n/a
Default Am I crazy - Mocked up kitchen

My wife and I are close to settling on a new floorplan for our kitchen.
It is a major re-do.. knocking down walls etc. Now I want to make
sure it all works, I am thinking about demolishing the walls and
everything else in the entire space, then mocking in our new floorplan,
using folding tables and anything else I can find/build to replicate
our final plan. That way, I figure we will see any potential
problems.. it will be a week or two of living like we are camping.. but
I think it could yeild some good info on whether or not our final
design is the right thing.

We know we want to go back to the exterior walls and start over, so
there is no downside in taking out all the interior walls (we already
have cleared with builder what walls go.. and which can't be touched to
to structural integrity) and essentially taking it back to the walls.

Anyone else every tried this? Any Suggestions?

  #2   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
RayV
 
Posts: n/a
Default Am I crazy - Mocked up kitchen

They've done just that on TOH and found flaws in the design. If you
have the option/time to do this, I think it's a good idea.

  #3   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
PipeDown
 
Posts: n/a
Default Am I crazy - Mocked up kitchen

Its not a bad idea but will cost you time. When do you plan to order
materials like cabnets and flooring? Before or after? Waiting until after
will cause a big delay(actual lead time may be longer than the typical lead
time quoted in the store to potential customers) and if ordered before, what
if you do change the plan, more delays.

You can certainly get a head start using one of the several consumer level
home CAD programs to design the room and do a virtual walk through. One
program prints templates so you can cut them out and make a scale model.

With this extra step, your mock up will be a final reality check rather than
a planning step in the critical path.

If you really want some qualified advice. The $200 or so you will spend on
a kitchen planner will help ensure you didn't leave anything out of your
design. A missing trim panel can delay appliance installation and cost
days.


"Jack" wrote in message
ups.com...
My wife and I are close to settling on a new floorplan for our kitchen.
It is a major re-do.. knocking down walls etc. Now I want to make
sure it all works, I am thinking about demolishing the walls and
everything else in the entire space, then mocking in our new floorplan,
using folding tables and anything else I can find/build to replicate
our final plan. That way, I figure we will see any potential
problems.. it will be a week or two of living like we are camping.. but
I think it could yeild some good info on whether or not our final
design is the right thing.

We know we want to go back to the exterior walls and start over, so
there is no downside in taking out all the interior walls (we already
have cleared with builder what walls go.. and which can't be touched to
to structural integrity) and essentially taking it back to the walls.

Anyone else every tried this? Any Suggestions?



  #4   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Pete C.
 
Posts: n/a
Default Am I crazy - Mocked up kitchen

PipeDown wrote:

Its not a bad idea but will cost you time. When do you plan to order
materials like cabnets and flooring? Before or after? Waiting until after
will cause a big delay(actual lead time may be longer than the typical lead
time quoted in the store to potential customers) and if ordered before, what
if you do change the plan, more delays.

You can certainly get a head start using one of the several consumer level
home CAD programs to design the room and do a virtual walk through. One
program prints templates so you can cut them out and make a scale model.

With this extra step, your mock up will be a final reality check rather than
a planning step in the critical path.

If you really want some qualified advice. The $200 or so you will spend on
a kitchen planner will help ensure you didn't leave anything out of your
design. A missing trim panel can delay appliance installation and cost
days.

"Jack" wrote in message
ups.com...
My wife and I are close to settling on a new floorplan for our kitchen.
It is a major re-do.. knocking down walls etc. Now I want to make
sure it all works, I am thinking about demolishing the walls and
everything else in the entire space, then mocking in our new floorplan,
using folding tables and anything else I can find/build to replicate
our final plan. That way, I figure we will see any potential
problems.. it will be a week or two of living like we are camping.. but
I think it could yeild some good info on whether or not our final
design is the right thing.

We know we want to go back to the exterior walls and start over, so
there is no downside in taking out all the interior walls (we already
have cleared with builder what walls go.. and which can't be touched to
to structural integrity) and essentially taking it back to the walls.

Anyone else every tried this? Any Suggestions?


I'll second the CAD suggestion. I've used Floorplan3D 3D from IMSI
(~$40) and find it very easy to use to test design ideas. FP3D's render
engine can even give you lighting that includes daylight based on
location, time of day and day of year. Kind of nice to see where the
sunshine will land.

Pete C.
  #5   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Jeff
 
Posts: n/a
Default Am I crazy - Mocked up kitchen

Could you take down some of the walls but leave the kitchen functional? As
others have said check on the time to order and receive cabinets. Around
here the housing market has slowed down but lots of folks are remodeling so
delays could be significant.

Most of our new lower cabinets are large drawers. I feel this is better
than cabinets with doors and slide out shelves. Similar cost but much better
use of space. We mocked up the drawers and put various combinations of
pans, bowls, etc in. Our upper cabinet doors don't have a divider between
opening pairs of doors, again gives more flexibility in the space behind the
doors.

Finally to meet current code several additional breakers and wiring had to
be added.

Good luck


"Jack" wrote in message
ups.com...
My wife and I are close to settling on a new floorplan for our kitchen.
It is a major re-do.. knocking down walls etc. Now I want to make
sure it all works, I am thinking about demolishing the walls and
everything else in the entire space, then mocking in our new floorplan,
using folding tables and anything else I can find/build to replicate
our final plan. That way, I figure we will see any potential
problems.. it will be a week or two of living like we are camping.. but
I think it could yeild some good info on whether or not our final
design is the right thing.

We know we want to go back to the exterior walls and start over, so
there is no downside in taking out all the interior walls (we already
have cleared with builder what walls go.. and which can't be touched to
to structural integrity) and essentially taking it back to the walls.

Anyone else every tried this? Any Suggestions?



Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"