Archive for the 'Kitchen Floor plans' Category

Kitchen Plans with Peninsulas

Peninsulas, after being a fashion no-no for years, are back in style again. Style aside, like an island, a peninsula can improve the functioning of kitchen floor plans or make them worse. They can be used to create a partial barrier between the kitchen area of a larger room and the rest of the room [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

U-Shaped Kitchen Layouts

U shaped kitchen floor plans can be very efficient designs, with everything close to hand and no through traffic.
The main downside is that you have two corners to deal with. Sometimes if the opposite working walls are fairly close together you can be better off using the space as a galley rather than a U.
A [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

L-shaped Kitchen Plans

The main advantages of L-shaped kitchen floor plans are that it’s easy to keep traffic out of the work triangle, they can be compact, and the area opposite the corner of the L can be the perfect place for a table and chairs or an island.
If the L gets too big, though, it can mean [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Galley Kitchens

Galley or corridor kitchen floor plans (two walls opposite each other) are some of the most efficient you can get, especially for a single cook. With two points of the triangle on one wall and the other point on the opposite wall, your walking distance will be short, but there’s also room for plenty of [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Single Wall Kitchen Layouts

One-wall kitchen floor plans can be very efficient, provided they are small enough. What’s that you say? Isn’t bigger better? Not when it involves walking back and forth along a long lineup of appliances and worktops! Keep your layout compact, or add an island across from your one wall if you have the space, and [...]

  • Share/Bookmark