Im fitting an IKEA kitchen into my 2.2m by 3.2m kitchen at the moment. I had thought the room was square, however it appears that it may not be.
If you stand in the doorway of the kitchen, the layout is a basic U shape, with cabinets/ cooker on the right, sink at the end opposite you, draws, and appliances on the left. Now, after putting the cupboards on the right hand side in place and flush with the wall, I have found that the angle between the front edge of those units, and the rear wall where the sink needs to go, is more than 90 degrees. If I aim to get the units square with the rear wall, then they are going to end up too far from the wall at the other end of the room.
I dont yet know if the left hand wall is parallel with the right hand, and it is just the rear wall which is out of square.
I am trying to work out what the best thing to do would be. My options seem to be:
1) Leave units flush against their respective walls, and have > 90 degree angles at work surface butt joints
2) Square the units with one another, so that butt joints between surface are 90 degrees
3) If left hand wall is parallel with right, leave units on these walls flush, and adjust sink unit etc until it is square with the other units, if not the wall.
Hope that makes some sense, any advice most gratefully received.
Rob
If you stand in the doorway of the kitchen, the layout is a basic U shape, with cabinets/ cooker on the right, sink at the end opposite you, draws, and appliances on the left. Now, after putting the cupboards on the right hand side in place and flush with the wall, I have found that the angle between the front edge of those units, and the rear wall where the sink needs to go, is more than 90 degrees. If I aim to get the units square with the rear wall, then they are going to end up too far from the wall at the other end of the room.
I dont yet know if the left hand wall is parallel with the right hand, and it is just the rear wall which is out of square.
I am trying to work out what the best thing to do would be. My options seem to be:
1) Leave units flush against their respective walls, and have > 90 degree angles at work surface butt joints
2) Square the units with one another, so that butt joints between surface are 90 degrees
3) If left hand wall is parallel with right, leave units on these walls flush, and adjust sink unit etc until it is square with the other units, if not the wall.
Hope that makes some sense, any advice most gratefully received.
Rob