Anonymous wrote:Figure out the scope, or close to it, first. If you can do a pull and plug renovation, that is much cheaper and faster.
We did our kitchen a year ago, and it was annoying but certainly not super painful. It was done in 6 weeks too, which was faster than I thought (I was mentally preparing for 10 since they'd promised 6-8 weeks). We moved plumbing and electrical, but did not remove any load bearing walls.
We used a company that our neighbors had recently used for an even larger scale renovation and we're very happy.
Anonymous wrote:Do it and enjoy your new kitchen... I would not recommend a piecemeal renovation- if you love your home and its location, do the renovation that you want. I have two boys and make dinner for my family every night (and work full-time). I gutted my kitchen last year and while it sucked for a bit, I love my new kitchen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just don’t do it. Fix what’s broken.
It's not really an option. We have hideous linoleum floors, the laminate on the counter tops is peeling, the cabinets were so filthy when we bought the house, it makes us look like slobs.
Well, this is obviously not true. Replacing the countertops and floors is not very disruptive and comparatively inexpensive. Dirty cabinets can be cleaned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just don’t do it. Fix what’s broken.
It's not really an option. We have hideous linoleum floors, the laminate on the counter tops is peeling, the cabinets were so filthy when we bought the house, it makes us look like slobs.
Anonymous wrote:I hear you, OP. We did a huge gut reno 10 years ago, my husband did a lot of work himself. Now we wouldn't have the energy and commitment.
My father has done two IKEA kitchens (design, order and install himself) in both his apartments. The entire process was really smooth, and I believe now they have installers you can hire. Would you be willing to explore this? At least it's one-stop shop. Both of his kitchens have aged wonderfully. My Home Depot kitchen looks nicer on the outside, but actually, it has lots of hidden faults that his do not.
Anonymous wrote:Just don’t do it. Fix what’s broken.