3 Min. Read

It’s common for a customer to send us a kitchen layout with a small, but significant error with kitchen design clearances. In a corner where a door, drawer, or appliance cannot open freely, big problems arise. When building a kitchen with this problem, correcting it is often impossible after installation is complete. Additionally, you may end up having to tear out the new cabinets and countertop and start over. 

Dayton Urban Stone kitchen cabinets

Inside Corners

Typically, this issue arises in a corner or where a cabinet or appliance is next to an adjoining run of cabinets. In watching for obstructions, a designer considers not only cabinets, but the style of cabinet hardware, and appliance specifications. The U-shaped kitchen above has two inside corners – with both, there is the risk of obstruction, made greater by projecting cabinet hardware. 

Dayton Urban Stone kitchen cabinets

In the corner near the cooktop, we used a corner storage solution, the lazy Susan cabinet with a bifold door. Note that our Super Susan cabinet has no center post, so large items fit easily on the rotating trays, and it offers great, flexible corner clearances for kitchen designs.

Dayton Urban Stone kitchen cabinets

The corner near the refrigerator presented a challenge. Inside the corner, the floor rises to accommodate the basement stairway, eliminating the lazy Susan as an option. So, we used two base cabinets. A spacer between the drawer base and the corner provides clearance for drawers to open without obstruction. On the right, a door-only cabinet with roll-out trays eliminates the need for a second spacer.

Don’t Forget About Appliance Clearance

Refrigerators can vary as much as 4 inches in depth from one model to another, and dishwashers and ovens vary in the clearance needed to open a door. Your designer will need the exact models and measurements of your appliances to visualize all movement in the kitchen and ensure you don’t run into a problem like the one in the sketch above.

CliqStudios design packet 3D renderings

The design on the left failed to take into account cabinet clearance required by the over-sized door on the tall dishwasher. Luckily, the error was caught before cabinets were built. This was an easy fix, corrected by moving the refrigerator to the right and using a wider cabinet in the corner.

What Other Cabinets Are Great for Corner Clearances? 

Kitchen design clearances certainly need to be accounted for during the design phase, so it’s important to know your options. Before making any final decisions, it’s best to have a design professional double-check your layout for function, but the corner cabinet you choose is based on your storage preferences. Lazy susans, blind corners- with or without pull-outs, corner drawer bases, and even “dead” corners are all options that can be used in tighter spaces.

 

Let Us Review Your Kitchen Design – No Charge

If you have a design – one you’ve drawn or received from a studio or cabinet retailer – and you would like it reviewed, please send it to our design studio at designteam@cliqstudios.com. One of our professional designers will examine it for errors and missed opportunities. Our design service is always free, with no obligation to purchase.

 

Submit your design for review now!