Showing posts with label kitchen and bath. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kitchen and bath. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Kitchen Retrofit & Renovation Design

This entry shares something that I really enjoy doing...

Renovating, Recycling, and Design....

The following pictures are a kitchen remodel project that I designed and installed.  The thing to remember about this project is, it is a retro-fit kitchen.  This means, I took the kitchen out of one home and put it in another home.  The home the kitchen came from was getting a new kitchen (one that I participated in the re-design).  The home that the kitchen is going into...has a kitchen, and it's in a completely different room.

In the home that is getting a new kitchen, there is a kitchen already.  It's a small simple galley style kitchen.  The new kitchen - the re-purposed & recycled kitchen, is going to go into what was formerly the family room.

Here are some pictures of the existing family room - as it were, a family/office/school room.

The existing fireplace wall

The existing rear/exterior wall.


The cabinets, after transporting them from their old home in VA to their new home in PA.

The Design Proposal
Using all the existing cabinets (except for one wall cabinet).  I design a layout that is functional and appealing, while reusing as many of the existing pieces as we can. We removed 3 windows and 1 door, and  installed one new window and one new door.

Re-purposed materials as a utensil rack.
Using some left-over 3/4" copper pipe and 12 gauge copper wire bent around the pipe, we have an effective and somewhat industrial looking utensil rack.

We could not reuse the counter from the other kitchen, since the cabinet layout is not the same.  But we were able to have one manufactured for us to fit our new layout.

A view of the "finished" kitchen 
Another view of the 'new' kitchen.


The refinished fireplace wall


This was a fun project.  One of my favorite types of remodeling is when I get to help people save money while improving their home and living.  For the cost of a U-haul rental trailer, and a few new materials - this kitchen was designed and installed for under $6,000...and added a whole lot more than that to the value of the home.  The old kitchen from this home was donated to Habitat for Humanity, and the space is currently being re-purposed to make a 1st floor laundry room and a new bathroom.


Saturday, November 13, 2010

Kitchen Remodel

I am working with a client on a kitchen remodeling project in Virginia. The deign phase is moving along quite quickly.

The following are some images created to show the client what we are proposing for their new design.


The existing "fridge wall":










The proposed new "fridge wall"
Proposed: 2 utility cabinets, and (2) 30" built-in refrigerators.










The existing pantry wall and butler's pantry (opening into the dining room), with existing wine-refrigerators to the left.










The new area - proposed relocating the Butler's Pantry and installing a new walk-in wine cooler.










A rendering showing a close-up cut-away view of the proposed wine-cooler.












Demolition to start soon!

Friday, August 13, 2010

Re-Considering Your Bathroom

There's a reason Europeans call them water closets. From our toilets to our tubs, roughly 60 percent of a home's water consumption takes place in the bathroom, according to the California Urban Water Conservation Council.

Any renovations or improvements you make in your bathroom should be done with an eye on the water consumption, especially in older homes. Past manipulations to your existing fixtures may be luring you into a false sense of security about how much water you're actually using.

How Many Times Do You Flush?
The toilet, hands (and seats) down, is your home's largest water user, guzzling roughly 27% of your household supply every year. At that rate, make sure the 1.6-gallon-per-flush (gpf) model you're sitting on really only uses 1.6 gallons each time you flush, it might be using more. A recent study revealed that some 1.6-gpf toilets actually used 1.98 gpf on average, often times due to double flushing caused by poor performance or to malfunctioning parts.

If you've purchased a home with a pre-installed 1.6-gpf model, there's no way of knowing whether the previous owner made any such inefficient modifications. As the parts wear out (they generally last around five years) be sure to ask the hardware store specifically for 1.6-gpf replacements. Some analysts suggest that it's really best to get a low-flow toilet.

Bathroom renovators on a budget will be happy to know that a fair number of water sensable toilets, fall in the low-to-middle price range. Also, keep in mind that some water-strapped municipalities will provide rebates for water-efficient appliances, dropping that price even lower.

Don't Forget to Wash Behind Your Wallet.
While your privy uses the most water in the W.C., showers are predominantly filled with opportunities for waste, thanks to easy manipulation of low-flow showerheads and the rise in popularity of multi-head shower systems, some of which spew an astonishing 80 gallons per minute.

To the ruin of water conservationists everywhere, these systems are legal. Even though the federal standard requires shower-heads to pump out no more than 2.5 gpm, a simple and very large loophole in the legislation lets these heads through. The legislation only applies to single-head units, these multi-head systems can utilize a dozen or more. And, what used to be exclusive of really high-end homes is now becoming more commonplace. I guess people just like to be really wet.

Many showerheads achieve their 2.5-gpm rate with small water-restrictor discs. Often times, a homeowner will get annoyed with these and remove them, resulting in a flow of nearly 5 gpm. Some manufacturers that sell these showerheads go so far as to describe in the product brochure how to remove it.

To check your head, you can measure its water consumption in a few ways. One way is to pour 2.5 gallons into a bucket and mark the water level. Then, take a stopwatch and fill the bucket for a minute in your shower. If your showerhead sprays more than 2.5 gpm, I would suggest getting a new one. Most good ones cost less than $75. It will save you money.

Lastly, if major purchases are in your budget, consider a tankless, on-demand water heater. Households waste 6.35 gallons of water per day waiting for it to heat up; 3.48 gallons of that is for showers alone. Tankless systems heat water when you need it right at the point of usage (at the faucet) cutting wait times down to only about 30 seconds.

Drip Drip Drip....
Last but not least, your bathroom sink faucet, also now subject to government standards, must use 2.2 gpm or less. Taps aren't prone to modifications of the bad sort, but you can increase their efficiency with a 1.5-gpm aerator, available at any local hardware store.


Keeping it Real-ly Green

If you're saving and conserving water in your bathroom, and are still on the looking for other ways to be friendly. Here are seven green items no bathroom should be without.

1. Recycled, processed-chlorine-free toilet paper and tissues.
Look for 2. PVC-free shower curtain. Your cheapest alternative to conventional PVC curtains are polyethylene vinyl acetate (PEVA) liners, as durable as PVC without the hormone-disrupting, asthma-inducing phthalates. Or you can splurge on the eco gold standard, hemp, which also resists mildew.

3. Low-Flow showerhead.
If the Delta H2OKinetics 1.6-gpm showerhead is out of your price range, you can still get a remarkably affordable, ultra-efficient 1.75-gpm model, such as the Niagara Chrome Earth massage showerhead for $19.95.

4. Petrochemical-free personal care products. Read ingredients lists diligently and watch out for the chemicals listed in The Dirty Dozen Chemicals in Cosmetics.

5. Organic cotton bath linens. These can be pricey, but you can build your collection slowly.
  • Fortunately, national retailers like West Elm have some for $6-$19
  • Pottery Barn has their line ranging from $8-$26
  • Bed, Bath & Beyond are selling them in brick-and-mortar stores for $7.99-$14.99 so there's no need to pay for shipping.
6. CFL vanity bulbs.
Repeated on-and-off use of CFL bulbs and the humidity of bathrooms will reduce their lifespans by a few months, but switching to CFLs still cuts energy use considerably.

7. Green Cleaners.
If you don't want to make your own cleaners using baking soda (a non-abrasive scouring powder), vinegar (a natural disinfectant) and tea tree oil (an effective mildew killer), choose least-toxic alternatives.

So, the next time you step into your bathroom...consider reconsidering what you have and what you use. You might just be surprised and what you can save.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Kitchen Design

I am working on a new kitchen layout for a client in Virginia.

Below are some computer generated images of the new design.

























The design process to this point is as follows:

I gather data and measurements of the existing kitchen, cabinets, openings, and adjoining rooms; along with photos in order to generate a plan of the existing conditions.

Then, we determine a rough idea of the new space.

Then, we propose some design ideas for the new layout and function.

These images show the client what their new kitchen will look like before we order the first cabinet. Before we begin to remove the existing.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Custom Kitchen and Bath Designs

Following are four kitchen and bath design projects



A custom vanity for a master suite bathroom.









Bath vanity.







Kitchen remodel project.








Powder Room remodel project