Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Aww, that's what I wanted to hear. Me too, I spend so much time in the kitchen, making dinners and lunches. I would love a clean peaceful space to have my morning coffee on the weekends.
Then do it! Price out what it costs to move. 6% just in realtor costs! Put that money in your own house and love it yourself.
Anonymous wrote:We are currently taking the middle ground approach—new cabinets, countertops, and island from Lowe’s. Keeping flooring and appliances (except replacing gas stovetop with induction). So far it’s been fairly painless and affordable, though we’re not done yet. If there’s any chance you can keep the existing layout, I think you’ll avoid a lot of the headaches you’re worried about.
Anonymous wrote:OP if you’re going to be on a tight budget and that’s going to make you miserable, just don’t do it. Replace the counters and the flooring, scrub the cabinets with simple green, and put the money you have in a CD because interest rates are high right now. Then keep saving and revisit it in 5-10 years.
Anonymous wrote: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.
NP. I disagree with this advice. New cabinets are life changing. Countertops are whatever (new ones will still function like countertops!), but cabinets are just completely different. We did 100% drawers and we can fit 2x as much. Everything is very neat now. Our 90s cabinets were completely falling apart inside and the drawers were awful. If you're going to do anything in your kitchen, get the cabinets. Don't put nice new counters on nasty cabinets.
OP, you just have to bite the bullet and do it. Luckily if you do it in warmer weather you can cook on the grill more nights. We completely did our kitchen ourselves (hung the cabinets, did the backsplash, laid the wood floors) and even that was only 4 months. My friends who had contractors do it spent like 6 weeks at most.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Aww, that's what I wanted to hear. Me too, I spend so much time in the kitchen, making dinners and lunches. I would love a clean peaceful space to have my morning coffee on the weekends.
Anonymous wrote:And then there's this
Kitchen renovation reveals 400-year-old friezes in York flat
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/mar/19/kitchen-renovation-reveals-400-year-old-friezes-in-york-flat
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.