Hello,
In our new kitchen, there is a continuous plinth along the wall that is 7cm (3 inches) deep and 16cm (6 inches) high. With the tall Capita legs, the plinth height could be compensated for. However, this would result in a countertop height of about 99cm (39 inches), which I consider too high.
Unfortunately, the kitchen is not very wide; there is only 195cm (77 inches) of space between the plinths. In a galley kitchen layout, a 60cm (24 inch) base cabinet would no longer be able to open fully. I also doubt a dishwasher would fit properly when I think about it...
Does anyone have a solution that allows for a standard countertop height (91–95cm / 36–37 inches) and includes a (semi-integrated) dishwasher?
Regards,
Wachse
In our new kitchen, there is a continuous plinth along the wall that is 7cm (3 inches) deep and 16cm (6 inches) high. With the tall Capita legs, the plinth height could be compensated for. However, this would result in a countertop height of about 99cm (39 inches), which I consider too high.
Unfortunately, the kitchen is not very wide; there is only 195cm (77 inches) of space between the plinths. In a galley kitchen layout, a 60cm (24 inch) base cabinet would no longer be able to open fully. I also doubt a dishwasher would fit properly when I think about it...
Does anyone have a solution that allows for a standard countertop height (91–95cm / 36–37 inches) and includes a (semi-integrated) dishwasher?
Regards,
Wachse
I
IKEA-Experte18 Sep 2015 12:45Hello,
you can install the cabinets with a 7 cm (3 inches) gap from the wall and use a 70 cm (28 inches) deep countertop. To make the space between the two rows tight but not uncomfortably narrow, you can use 40 cm (16 inches) deep cabinet boxes for one of the rows.
you can install the cabinets with a 7 cm (3 inches) gap from the wall and use a 70 cm (28 inches) deep countertop. To make the space between the two rows tight but not uncomfortably narrow, you can use 40 cm (16 inches) deep cabinet boxes for one of the rows.
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