Good ideas to create more kitchen storage
8 years ago
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- 8 years ago
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Need Help creating a new kitchen, ideas?
Comments (38)Samantha B I just completed my kitchen Reno in Perth. My pantry was also bricked up like yours. Literally doubled the space by getting rid of it but we found out after that the pantry was structural & we had to put an extra support beam in the roof instead ($800) so be careful of that! We completely moved the plumbing, gas & electrics & it only cost a few hundred! So don't be afraid to do that as long as u know decent priced tradies! We ended up doing nearly everything ourselves & went with a masters flat packed kitchen & sourced our own stone benchtops dirt cheap ($2500 installed for a 2m bench & a 1.5m island each with one waterfall edge.). Heres before & after pics....See MoreBedroom : more storage? A chair?
Comments (9)Not sure what that box is behind your bed, but renting you can't paint it! But how can you add personal colour or texture temporarily. Ilike the mirror it doubles your space, the rug is a must as mentioned above, it will give you a nice colour perimeter to colour tour floor, and definitely grounds the space. Lighting should be addressed too, a floor lamp that cantilevers over the bed in the corner for night ambience and choose one that suits your style. To further ground your space, that box behind the bed I'd have a charcoal,Mao your bedding pops in contrast, how? Runa strip of sticky velchro onto, and buy a fabric you like and attach thevelchro to the back, it can be easily sewn up at your dry cleaners, simp,y fold it or cut it to the box size, and attatch velchro, now it's an upholstered bedhead. Cost effective and cheap. Tie in with same colour euro pillows. I'd place in between your wir door and ensuite door a tram scroll, or a slim line set of drawers. A huge canvas above your bed reflected in your bed will give you a view and provide a colour palette. If you can't afford art, buy sample pots of paint that your bedding features, and simply paint yourself, splatter, or flick paint, finger paint or even an ammeter can do this, drop blobs of two or three colours randomly on the canvas, choose three colours that are close in colour, then pick one more totally different from it, example orange, peach and coral then a navy ink blue, using a plastic sauce bottle, squirt water over the canvas helping to mix the paint for you, not too much, but then just move your can vas arou d to roll the paint and drip in different directions,. Dry it flat overnight, it will have some faxed colour, old solid brights and a blend of the two, so when it's above your bed, your quilt will now look amazing, and the art abstract and unique. Plus you can throw it out or paint over it without worrying about is cost. And a talking point, if the company ever wants to talk ;)...See MoreHelp, we need more ideas
Comments (8)Hi I have work in the building Industry for many years before venturing into Landscaping and Design. It come to this having a split level can be easy but you will need to think would you like to come up and down multi level home. I had a multi level home at Bonnells Bay (Newcastle) N.S.W. and found after living there for 5 year a bit of chore to go up and down the level so much. A single level flow better to go with a Alfresco Dinning experience, as if you have a guest at your house been entertain on the outside it make it hard to find a toilet if needed. I would say to your husband to weigh up the cost, it is simple and as follows a retaining wall of one level, can be anything from stone or besser block or timber. These element will be what you can afford to do, the stone and besser are the most expensive of the 3 but require the less maintenance and last the longest. Timber can be low cost, but has the tendency to decay over time and has a life span of no longer then 5-8 year, depending on environmental conditions. A retaining wall of that height of 1.5m, tend to need a engineering spec to built and so my advise is to go for the besser as it the cheaper then stone. if your are concern on look of the besser, it can dressed up with stone looking tile or there a number of option to go for. is to get the costing of doing a multi level home design. This can be costly too depend on if it going to be slab or bears and joist home, as the cost differ and different type of process have to happen. You got to ask yourself, is my house raise of the ground or is a slab that sit directly on the ground. to put it to you as simple as I can, for a slab need steel and pier to be dug and so on, so if this is the case then with your current house is siting on a cut and fill which is common for this type of slab construction. Where a Bearers and joist system sit on top of a raised pier that come off the ground. this is what a lot of the older style home have, the only thing about this not a lot of builder and trades people do not how to do this as it a dying art of constructing house. final option is to do a raise slab which raises like a retaining wall but in face bricks and a slab is pore on top but not seen form the outside and the face bricks continues As for the design of your house it all up to what you want for a house, you have to ask yourself can I use this for the long term or is something I want rather then need. Sometime we over compensate for thing and the saying in design is less tends to be best. a flowing design is a happy one and can be more of a chore to go with something that is wanted then needed. A little tip for your kitchen, make shore that the sink, stove and fridge are in a triangle form from each other as this flow the best when cooking. Any tip of knowledge on retaining wall just send me a message...See MorePolished concrete floor a good idea for kitchens?
Comments (11)I think concrete makes a fantastic surface in wet areas, and looks even better in high traffic areas. The feel of a raw or honed concrete underfoot is amazing, and the unpretentious look in well designed spaces is earthy and contemporary. There are so many possibilities for colour, finish, inclusions and add ins, heated or non heated etc, that the beauty of concrete almost matches stone. For me, a huge concern is foundation movement, if on a slab, there is bound to be ground settlement and often hair line cracks can shift and become noticeable, patching is obvious and really just highlights a fault joint, basically destroying an entire floor, and leaving you with the option to tile or lay flooring over it anyway. An expensive excercise just to end up where you started. the veneer version can be laid on both pre finished slabs, fc surfaces and even timber, but the flexible movement and expansion that occurs often voids the warranty on its finish, I've investigated this option for myself, and basically th client takes the risk, and hopes for the best. As far as concerns regarding hardness goes, hardness =durability, so plates smashing will occur as it would on every other floor surface! There are large scale porcelain tiles that have a pre finished concrete look, really large as in 3000mm x 1500mm, minimising grout lines, and will be somewhat warmer underfoot. Cost is really high, so it needs to be something on your wish list, and where No compromise can be or will be made. love concrete..time worn and tested....See More- 8 years ago
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