Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Property/DIY

Join our Property forum for renovation, DIY, and house selling advice.

Replacing a kitchen cupboard

8 replies

RatherBeIndoors · 03/09/2016 19:51

I'm moving the washing machine into the (new - yippee!!) utility. That leaves me a hole - is it possible to add a new under-counter cupboard without dismantling the kitchen? Any tips gratefully received Smile

OP posts:
fluffikins · 03/09/2016 19:58

Yes, we removed an inbuilt fridge and replaced it with a cupboard, we did have the door from the fridge we could repurpose for the cupboard door though, but if the range is still being sold then getting a matching door should be fine. You just need to ensure the gap is ok for standard cupboard width (usually 600mm)

PigletJohn · 03/09/2016 20:47

you just wind the legs down so it is shorter than the gap between floor and worktop, slide it into place, then reach down and wind the legs up again. You can take cabinets out in the reverse way, but look inside first in case they are screwed to the wall or the worktop.

Any brand of cabinet will do (except Ikea are a non-standard size) provided the screw holes for the hinges are the same standard distance from top and bottom as the hinge holes in the doors you are using.

It might be difficult to get matching doors as ranges change.

RatherBeIndoors · 03/09/2016 21:17

Thank you both - that makes sense about the legs but I would never have thought of it! I will have a look and see if the kitchen type's discontinued...

OP posts:
wowfudge · 03/09/2016 23:42

If you don't already have one, you could fit a dishwasher into the space.

Ntinyn · 04/09/2016 06:35

If you can't find a door to match, add some shelves

RatherBeIndoors · 04/09/2016 12:57

We do have a dishwasher - shelves could be an option though...

OP posts:
PigletJohn · 04/09/2016 14:33

if you decide to go for open cab with shelves, you can get the cab and shelves made up in a laminate that tones or roughly matches with the colour of your doors or worktop.

E.g. I have doors in reddish walnut, and had some extra shelves made up, at very modest cost, in one of the many finishes available. I paid £1 each for the samples to check the match.

A photo would be interesting.

PigletJohn · 04/09/2016 15:26

this sort of thing choice of 100 colours

Delivery costs are a bit of a drag if you are only buying one.

Other suppliers do them in self-assembly which might be cheaper

New posts on this thread. Refresh page