Monday, April 29, 2013

5 Things We Learned While Buying an IKEA Kitchen.

Faith's Kitchen Renovation: 5 Things We Learned While Buying an IKEA Kitchen Renovation Diary: Faith's Budget Luxe Kitchen | The Kitchn:
Why an IKEA Kitchen?
The decision to get an IKEA kitchen was very simple: Price and modern design.

Price
IKEA is like no other company when it comes to scale of economy in their home furnishings. I don't love every single thing that IKEA does, but when it comes to kitchen cabinets, I really didn't see any other way to get the size and style of kitchen we wanted.

Modular and Modern
IKEA cabinets are completely modular — you can buy them in any configuration and adapt them to your style to a rather astonishing degree, especially if you, like us, wanted a more modern and sleek look. Their cabinets are frameless and easily adaptable to modern, flat-fronted doors.

How's the Quality of IKEA Kitchen Cabinets?
I understand that some people are suspicious of IKEA cabinets, since they are made of particle board (similar to MDF - medium density fiberboard, but a reader pointed out that IKEA actually uses particle board not MDF in their cabinet bases). The low cost of the cabinets and their material are red flags to some folks who just really want the best for their kitchen.

Particle Board & MDF
But here's the thing. Most off-the-rack cabinet systems are also made of some grade of particle board. Any other cabinets we could afford (like the Kraftmaid cabinets or other lines sold at stores like Lowe's and Home Depot) were also particle board. You can go a step up and get cabinet-grade plywood, but there is some debate over whether that is actually superior to particle board or MDF.

To go all the way to the top and buy solid wood cabinet boxes, well — that just wasn't feasible for us. It would have cost tens of thousands of dollars, money we couldn't justify even if we had wanted to. Our entire cabinet system cost much less than $10,000. (See my full price breakdown at the end.)

High-Quality Hardware
For me, the most key part of a cabinet is the drawer. If anything is going to swell and warp, it's a drawer. But IKEA's drawers are solid metal, with really superb hardware, Blum hinges, and drawer dampers. (We love the dampers — I'll explain more about them in the next post.)

I read copiously on other homeowners' experiences with IKEA cabinets and talked to contractor friends. For the most part, they were uniformly enthusiastic. Yes, IKEA cabinets are cheap, but that doesn't mean they're shoddy or flimsy.

How Complicated Is the Kitchen?
Before I tell you what we learned, I wanted to point out one more thing about our kitchen renovation that gave us confidence using IKEA cabinets. We were basically starting with a blank slate. We were building a kitchen addition onto our house, so we didn't have to deal with odd corners or preexisting constraints. We had the luxury of a simple layout — basically an open galley with a long island and straight run of cabinets. There were no corner cabinets, and, for that matter, no upper cabinets either.

If, on the other hand, we had been renovating an existing kitchen without the ability to move walls and plumbing and with more challenges in fitting everything in, I would have been more likely to look into custom cabinets or at least get more help from a kitchen designer. But my "two straight lines" kitchen was kind of the ideal situation for IKEA's process.

Just like anything else, IKEA cabinets have their limitations, but we felt that in the end the IKEA cabinets were by far the best deal for our project.

Here, then, are a few things we learned in the process.
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