Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would be weird to have the kitchen in the front of a 4 on 4 colonial. Could hurt resale value. But if you are staying there and it is what you want, by all means do it.
Yeah, I know you and DH are right, it’s a little weird. Ugh. But keeping the kitchen in the back room/ even opening up the wall to dining area- will limit what we can do and eliminate the option of having the 4 big windows looking out into our lovely backyard since we will need that wall space for kitchen stuff.
My thought is, we have been here 5 years and know our current annoyances with the kitchen, and we plan to stay for another 20 so resale value isn’t as big of a concern, the kitchen will be outdated anyways when we sell it. But I don’t know if I’m being blinded by just wanting the kitchen stuff in that larger space.
The trendy solution would be a big island and no upper cabinets, just big windows. Would that work?
Anonymous wrote:The change doesn’t fit the style of the house, so I think it will feel weird and may not age well. A rambler or more modern style house could pull this off.
Having the kitchen in the back is nice for privacy. You tend to use the kitchen at night and early, and sometimes in pajamas. You don’t want visibility from the street.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would be weird to have the kitchen in the front of a 4 on 4 colonial. Could hurt resale value. But if you are staying there and it is what you want, by all means do it.
Yeah, I know you and DH are right, it’s a little weird. Ugh. But keeping the kitchen in the back room/ even opening up the wall to dining area- will limit what we can do and eliminate the option of having the 4 big windows looking out into our lovely backyard since we will need that wall space for kitchen stuff.
My thought is, we have been here 5 years and know our current annoyances with the kitchen, and we plan to stay for another 20 so resale value isn’t as big of a concern, the kitchen will be outdated anyways when we sell it. But I don’t know if I’m being blinded by just wanting the kitchen stuff in that larger space.
Anonymous wrote:It would be weird to have the kitchen in the front of a 4 on 4 colonial. Could hurt resale value. But if you are staying there and it is what you want, by all means do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A few things to consider.
Most kitchens have a picture window above the sink. Will this window face the street? I know one family who redid their kitchen and the huge picture window faces out to the street. It's pointless to add blinds/shades as they would detract from the beauty of the window and hard to reach over the sink, but at night the whole neighborhood can see right into their kitchen.
Will there be any eat in space in the new kitchen? if the kitchen stayed where it is now, the new eat in space will become the default hanging area, and that's where you want the light and privacy of facing the backyard.
Also, there's nothing ironic about a garage door going right into the kitchen: the idea is that that's where you bring in your groceries.
Yeah, garages usually have a door to the kitchen.
Anonymous wrote:A few things to consider.
Most kitchens have a picture window above the sink. Will this window face the street? I know one family who redid their kitchen and the huge picture window faces out to the street. It's pointless to add blinds/shades as they would detract from the beauty of the window and hard to reach over the sink, but at night the whole neighborhood can see right into their kitchen.
Will there be any eat in space in the new kitchen? if the kitchen stayed where it is now, the new eat in space will become the default hanging area, and that's where you want the light and privacy of facing the backyard.
Also, there's nothing ironic about a garage door going right into the kitchen: the idea is that that's where you bring in your groceries.
Anonymous wrote:A few things to consider.
Most kitchens have a picture window above the sink. Will this window face the street? I know one family who redid their kitchen and the huge picture window faces out to the street. It's pointless to add blinds/shades as they would detract from the beauty of the window and hard to reach over the sink, but at night the whole neighborhood can see right into their kitchen.
Will there be any eat in space in the new kitchen? if the kitchen stayed where it is now, the new eat in space will become the default hanging area, and that's where you want the light and privacy of facing the backyard.
Also, there's nothing ironic about a garage door going right into the kitchen: the idea is that that's where you bring in your groceries.