Sunday, June 18, 2023

Kitchen Layouts With Corner Pantry

Kitchen Layouts With Corner Pantry

Many North American homes in the 1990’s and 2000’s were designed with walk-in corner pantries.  They provided tons of additional storage and were loved for many years. They often have built-in walls (dry walled and painted) on each side and a 24” solid or glass passage door on the front. Inside they can be outfitted with either of MDF, plywood, wood or metal rack shelving.

They became so popular and were almost a status symbol of a desirable kitchen back in the day. Let’s discuss some background information, advantages and disadvantages of the neo-angle built-in corner pantry and hopefully help you decide if a corner pantry is right for you.

Beautiful

Goodbye Cold Room:  Let’s face it, most people love to store and collect food. Back in the day, food storage was often done in the cold room, which was typically in the basement, where preserves and canned items were stored to carry people through the winter months. Slowly, food storage crept up from the lonely basement into the kitchen area.

Kitchen Design For New Build (corner Pantry Or Not).

This could be for a few reasons including the reduction of home canning and the increase in purchasing premade canned goods, which could have led to the demise or need for a cold room. As the years went on, home building standards changed and it became impractical to build new homes with cold rooms, as it was deemed as not very energy efficient. Moving canned storage items from the basement closer to the kitchen also improved the user experience, saving a lifetime of countless steps and stairs not having to go to the basement to grab a can of chickpeas or Grandma’s pickles.

Bulk Purchasing:  As buying behaviours shifted from purchasing what you needed to the warehouse or bulk style shopping, corner pantries quickly became a necessity to store those items. Why buy one bottle of mustard, when you can buy a lifetime supply for the same price?  Right?

Recycling:  Another contributing factor is the increase in household recycling. As recycling became more popular, the corner pantry became the obvious place to neutrally store empty cans, bottles, paper and plastic. This is still true, however, more and more people are now incorporating 2 bin recycle pullouts into their new kitchens, reclaiming valuable space in the pantry.

Kitchen Pantry Storage ( Clever Ideas ) Small Large Pantry Design

Not yet.  In today’s new home design, the built-in corner pantry is slightly less popular. As home designs change, we are seeing an increase of walk-through pantries that lead to an area near the garage, which is a great user experience design and can save a lot of extra walking. These walk-through pantries come in all shapes and sizes, but are often larger and have more storage than the neo-angle corner pantry of the good old days.

What remains the same is that people want more food storage that is more effectively used. There is also a demand for homeowners wanting to have storage that is more ergonomic and provides a better user experience. Fewer steps, less lifting, more organized and more convenient are the top concerns. We don’t think the corner pantry will be extinct anytime soon, but we’ll keep an eye on it.

Kitchen

It looks like you’re visiting from the United States. For the most up to date product information, please visit our USA Website.After living in her 1990s home in Alberta, Canada, for five years, Erin Zubot had spent enough days bumping into the awkwardly angled kitchen island. “I had been planning to focus on cosmetic upgrades, but the longer I spent cooking there, the more I realized it wasn’t functional, ” the content creator explains. A way-too-deep pantry, not enough cabinet space, and dim recessed lighting just weren’t up to Zubot’s standards, not to mention the dark brown walls. The first item on her to-do list? Move the stove out of her way.

Small Kitchen Ideas That Prove That Less Is More

Although the island appeared to offer an ample amount of counter space, it actually housed a too-large electric cooktop, leaving just the corners on which to prep veggies. “I would come home and have to place all of my grocery bags on the stove, ” she remembers.

By getting rid of the fixture—Zubot sold it and her wall oven in order to purchase an all-in-one version—she could craft her dream rectangular island, complete with butcher block counters (stained darker to match the floors) and plenty of drawer storage for Tupperware and small appliances. 

Walk

The old cabinetry floated nearly 18 inches from the ceiling with a chunky shelf on top, making Zubot feel a bit claustrophobic despite the room’s almost-10-foot height. To make things even stranger, the “overhead” lighting was built into the same ledge. To match the rest of the home’s airy feeling, she tore the platform clean off the walls. In its place hang IKEA Sektion cabinets with custom Shaker fronts. No more awkward, empty vertical space. And that wasn’t where the demolition stopped. 

Kitchen Corner Decorating Ideas, Tips, Space Saving Solutions

That large corner pantry also had to go. Zubot wasn’t storing enough on its dim shelves to make the square footage it took up worth it. “Anything is better than dead space, ” she says. By removing the door, she could extend her new upper cabinets to the room’s true corner and make room for a custom arched stove-hood cover in the process. 

Due to her region’s strict electrical codes, Zubot’s vision of an appliance garage was nearly crushed. “The issue was we can’t leave them plugged in all the time when they’re out of sight, ” she explains. So instead of a flip-open cabinet, she positioned her coffee maker on a pull-out tray tucked next to the stove. Her mugs are on a shelf above; all it takes is a roll of the platform for her morning cuppa. 

-

On the right-hand side of the alcove is another handy niche—this one to hold all of Zubot’s spices within easy reach. A custom shelving unit with mini gallery bars keeps every cinnamon stick and bay leaf in place. 

Kitchen Layout Ideas

While most people opt for store-bought tile for their backsplash, Zubot couldn’t find anything to fit her exact vision: an octagonal marble pattern. Paying a premium for a custom order wasn’t an option, so she broke out her handy rotary saw and cut the less expensive large slabs of black and white marble down to size. “Why would I pay for someone to cut shapes with a tool I already have?” Zubot says. “How hard could it really be?”

Although the island appeared to offer an ample amount of counter space, it actually housed a too-large electric cooktop, leaving just the corners on which to prep veggies. “I would come home and have to place all of my grocery bags on the stove, ” she remembers.

By getting rid of the fixture—Zubot sold it and her wall oven in order to purchase an all-in-one version—she could craft her dream rectangular island, complete with butcher block counters (stained darker to match the floors) and plenty of drawer storage for Tupperware and small appliances. 

Walk

The old cabinetry floated nearly 18 inches from the ceiling with a chunky shelf on top, making Zubot feel a bit claustrophobic despite the room’s almost-10-foot height. To make things even stranger, the “overhead” lighting was built into the same ledge. To match the rest of the home’s airy feeling, she tore the platform clean off the walls. In its place hang IKEA Sektion cabinets with custom Shaker fronts. No more awkward, empty vertical space. And that wasn’t where the demolition stopped. 

Kitchen Corner Decorating Ideas, Tips, Space Saving Solutions

That large corner pantry also had to go. Zubot wasn’t storing enough on its dim shelves to make the square footage it took up worth it. “Anything is better than dead space, ” she says. By removing the door, she could extend her new upper cabinets to the room’s true corner and make room for a custom arched stove-hood cover in the process. 

Due to her region’s strict electrical codes, Zubot’s vision of an appliance garage was nearly crushed. “The issue was we can’t leave them plugged in all the time when they’re out of sight, ” she explains. So instead of a flip-open cabinet, she positioned her coffee maker on a pull-out tray tucked next to the stove. Her mugs are on a shelf above; all it takes is a roll of the platform for her morning cuppa. 

-

On the right-hand side of the alcove is another handy niche—this one to hold all of Zubot’s spices within easy reach. A custom shelving unit with mini gallery bars keeps every cinnamon stick and bay leaf in place. 

Kitchen Layout Ideas

While most people opt for store-bought tile for their backsplash, Zubot couldn’t find anything to fit her exact vision: an octagonal marble pattern. Paying a premium for a custom order wasn’t an option, so she broke out her handy rotary saw and cut the less expensive large slabs of black and white marble down to size. “Why would I pay for someone to cut shapes with a tool I already have?” Zubot says. “How hard could it really be?”

Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Share on Google+
Tags :

Related : Kitchen Layouts With Corner Pantry

0 comments:

Post a Comment