well done on your kitchen plan
now stand in your kitchen and see how it works with the things you do every day
eg get out mugs,spoons, coffe tea, fill kettel, boil, get milk out fridge etc
did you have to move more than a few steps?
if so you need to re think
what about collecting dirty dishes, scrape waste into bin, rinse, put in dishwasher, empty, put away
does it work for you?
if not it doesnt matter how nice it looks, you will hate it
re eletrics - we didnt want lots of switches on the walls for isolating appliances and so we fitted a small consumer unit in one of the wall cupboarsd to simplify wiring. but thats probably not necessary in small flat / kitchen
we bought lighting similar to thisfrom ikea. it was £30 and not £50 and only white so i guess thsi is the new version
its meant to be plugged in but we hardwired it
we have two sections ( of one set of lights) under the wall cabinets and two sitting on top. they are really lightweight, you can just stick then on with sticky pads as they don't get hot. and a small switch underneath one of the cabinets at the door. i mean stuck to it, not on the wall
the effect at night is really fab and everyone thinks they were mega £££
if you have an all white kitchen it woudl be fun to have the option of different colours, or if you think thats naff you coudl set it to white
we also put pressure switch operated light inside some cupboards, so they go on when you open the door. useful, looks great and very inexpensive. if bought off teh net from specialist shop and not from expensive kitchen showroom
if i were you i would go for inexpensive white units from howdens etc, good quality worktops ( but not concrete or corian ), sink and taps, glass splashbacks and some clever lighting and storage
remember safety since your baby will soon be a toddler