Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So when you walk in the front door, will there be an opening on your right into the kitchen?
Usually there’s a big window in that front room. Are you keeping that window(s) the same? How is the kitchen to be laid out? Counters on that front wall? I’m just having a hard time picturing this.
So when we walk in the front door, you’re in a hallway with the staircase in front of you. Walls to either side, with 30 inch opening with French doors. Living to the left, dining to the right. New layout would be kitchen to the right instead. Now if the French doors stay closed into the hallway then no, you will not see the kitchen from the hallway. If the French doors are left swung open, then yes, you’ll see it through that 30 inch opening .
I actually think this is fine because you can close it off if you want and even when open it’s only partially visible. It sounds like you aren’t walking in the front door and greeted by a fridge.
But I’m in a rambler that has been opened up and we walk into our dining space with the kitchen to the front right of the house and our living spaces (family room/den) at back of the house. I actually like being able to see out our front windows when I am cooking dinner, but my kids like to play with neighbors out front. I know some people want to be able to look out over the backyard.
If you’re confident you’re going to be there 20 years I vote do what you want. The next owner will probably rip everything out anyway. Maybe leave some plumbing capped off so down the line you can sell it as being capable of renovation to flip things back around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry- to continue- the kitchen stove and fridge will be along the wall that abuts the hallway . Then a Long Island down the middle of the room (front to back). There isn’t a large bay window or anything . The front of our house is a large wooden door and 2 windows with shutters on either side (looks like a cape cod from the front).
Putting the stove on the hall wall seems like a poor layout. You want the stove on an exterior wall if at all possible. And will the front window be too low to sit nicely above a kitchen counter? Is it the right height already?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So when you walk in the front door, will there be an opening on your right into the kitchen?
Usually there’s a big window in that front room. Are you keeping that window(s) the same? How is the kitchen to be laid out? Counters on that front wall? I’m just having a hard time picturing this.
So when we walk in the front door, you’re in a hallway with the staircase in front of you. Walls to either side, with 30 inch opening with French doors. Living to the left, dining to the right. New layout would be kitchen to the right instead. Now if the French doors stay closed into the hallway then no, you will not see the kitchen from the hallway. If the French doors are left swung open, then yes, you’ll see it through that 30 inch opening .
Anonymous wrote:Sorry- to continue- the kitchen stove and fridge will be along the wall that abuts the hallway . Then a Long Island down the middle of the room (front to back). There isn’t a large bay window or anything . The front of our house is a large wooden door and 2 windows with shutters on either side (looks like a cape cod from the front).
Anonymous wrote: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?
So yes- one option from the designer is the kitchen stays put, sink at the back stays put, and the 4 big windows still go in. Then the fridge is sort of awkwardly in the corner alcove (it works, but it’s the part that seems weird to me) and the oven/ range is along the other side wall next to the garage door. Then the big island between kitchen and dining. On paper , to me, this loses almost all of our overhead storage and loses half of our pantry space next to the fridge. But if the island is big enough- we could put a lot of our kitchen storage items under there you’re saying?
Anonymous wrote:So when you walk in the front door, will there be an opening on your right into the kitchen?
Usually there’s a big window in that front room. Are you keeping that window(s) the same? How is the kitchen to be laid out? Counters on that front wall? I’m just having a hard time picturing this.
Anonymous wrote:Our house (Dutch colonial McLean) was built with kitchen immediately to one side of entrance with living room to other side. I was surprised when we first saw the house, but we love the house and have gotten used to it. It is not a problem at all.
Anonymous wrote:Put the kitchen in the back. You don't want to walk into the dining area from the garage. If it is in the budget, move the powder room from the back of the house to the hall.