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DIY amateurs and HGTV hurt kitchens.

The kitchen design profession requires a lot of experience and knowledge. So, when DIY-ers with little or no experience design kitchens, problems are guaranteed.

HGTV is full of self-taught TV personalities with no kitchen design knowledge and no experience working as a kitchen designer. Self-taught DIY “interior designers” who have never worked for a kitchen cabinet dealer and showroom also regularly represent themselves as professionals. Some even supervise contractors and run kitchen renovations with no construction knowledge. Without sufficient training and experience, they can only create problems – and added expense, in a very complex process.  

These DIY turned pseudo-professionals actually do their clients a big disservice. They’ve even created bad kitchen design trends that the public requests from real kitchen design professionals because they have seen the bad ideas on TV or in a friend’s home.

As a real kitchen designer with decades of experience in kitchen design, cabinetry, and residential construction, I have watched a growing number of these newbie DIY professionals attending industry events. Their strongest credentials are appliance, countertops, cabinetry and fixture recommendations – these are NOT kitchen design credentials! Experienced sales people and remodelers treat them like real professionals because they want their business.

I have recently worked with three different homeowners who began representing themselves as kitchen design and project managers shortly after Main Line Kitchen Design and their contractors completed their kitchens.  Each of them began charging homeowners for services that most actually qualified kitchen designers provide at no cost since real kitchen designers’ services are incorporated in the cost of the cabinetry we sell. These DIY “instant experts” felt qualified to advise others after being part of one kitchen remodel as opposed the 100+ kitchens a year that many real professionals work on. Without the requisite years of training and experience, they bring NO value to their customers or the process. Buyer beware!

Below are some of the ridiculous designs created by people without knowledge or training.

Is your initial reaction that this is a beautiful kitchen?  It could be but here are the problems – 

  • The side-by-side refrigerator against a wall so that refrigerator door does not open far enough to access.
  • The extremely oversized contractor-built plywood hood takes away valuable wall cabinet space and to professionals looks amateurish.
  • 30″ wide doors over ovens will sag and break quickly. No cabinet company recommends doors wider than 21 inches.
  • 30″ wide oven cabinets are a fire hazard when used with 30″ ovens. 33″ wide oven cabinets are standard. You can not have the side of a hot oven pressing against the side of a wood cabinet.
  • No overhang for countertop on the back and the left side of the island so potential island seating is lost.
  • Wine refrigerator belongs in a different position – reminder, there should be an overhang and then it would be very difficult to get the wine refrigerator.  It should go on the refrigerator end of the island. 
  • The distance between the Island and cooktop is too small.  At least 48″ is recommended, and it’s not like they’re short of space in this kitchen.

There’s an additional problem that’s even worse than all of the above – most of the cabinets are expensive custom sizes when they don’t have to be.  All because they are not made to industry standards. Often these unusual sizes sag, fall apart, look odd, or are impractical for a number of reasons. The kitchen design profession requires a lot of experience and knowledge. So when Do It Yourselfers with little or no experience design kitchens, problems are guaranteed.

Everyone designing a kitchen needs to follow THE NKBA GUIDLINES

How about this one?  Still BIG problems-see the caption.

DIY kitchen with dangerous mistake and other mistakes as well
Problems for the DIY kitchen above include: Illegal outlet over cooktop. Wall cabinets are mounted at 24″ off the countertop 18″ is the correct space. Oven mounted too low. Pantry door hits and is dented by the window trim. Cabinets have no handles making access difficult. Extra deep frameless wall cabinets will sag and fall off the wall if loaded with heavy plates.

Starting to see a trend?  See below.

DIY kitchen with many errors
Oddities here include: Wall cabinets slightly low. Hood too low AND too shallow. These simplistic type hoods are usually built on site and aren’t made by the cabinet companies who know better. Tall pantry doors are 67″ high. No cabinet company offers a warranty on doors this tall. They will warp and sag over time. Island to way too close to rage. 48″ is required.

Here’s a note from the actual DIY designer of the laundry area below- Space devoted to pet, pet friendly laundry room in white tones with appliances and dog bath shower with wooden ladder inside a drawer. Dog bed with gate. Modern interior design ideas.

Laundry room that will fall apart rapidly
Now a note from a professional The laundry area above will fall apart rapidly.
Putting heavy washer and dryers in elevated frameless cabinetry is foolish. The shaking of the appliances will tear the cabinetry apart. And the potential for water leaks only adds to the likelihood of calamities. Extra wide pet doors below and all the white wall doors above are 30 inches wide! Nine inches wider than anyone caring about durability would even consider.

For some reason, people that don’t know the rules always select frameless cabinetry.

Frameless cabinetry is less sturdy and less able to handle the crazy stresses that their designs put on the cabinetry. No toe kick also means that when all these doors and the pet stairs sag they will scrape the floor. Who even willingly builds this terrible cabinetry? By the way the left pet door doesn’t open because it binds on the baseboard. Just another sign that the designer was incompetent.

Some mistakes can even be dangerous- 

Dangerous DIY kitchen

In the photo above the range had no cabinet and countertop to the left. This is dangerous for two reasons.

First if someone to stands near the side of the range they can be burned. Secondly the handles of pans when turned away from the burners will extend out over the side of the range making it easy for hot pans to flip over on children. When I saw the second photo below I realized that the refrigerator was opening onto the the range area making it even more dangerous. What we don’t see is that the basement door is almost certianly to the right of the refrigerator making this a high traffic area and increasing the danger.

Bad design is too common and being further standardized by HGTV and the large number of DIY unqualified people who enter our industry.

The internet can undermine many professions if people believe that a quick internet search is a substitute for expertise. Don’t fall prey to this when it comes to your kitchen and your home! Individuals presenting themselves as design professionals and don’t have sufficient training and experience will only create problems – and added expense, to a very important and complex process.  

Read another relevant blog below:

4 Replies to “DIY amateurs and HGTV hurt kitchens.”

  1. Arielle in LA

    I love reading all of your posts and wish so much that you had a twin who was familiar with the west coast market. I’m in Los Angeles where the kitchen designer market is so fraught with questionable people. There’s a few too many absurdly rich people I guess. I tried to go see Fabuwood line at a place, and the people were trying to get me to hire them to do a full remodel. I am just replacing cabinets and countertops. Another place seems more ethical to me, but they only carry craft maid or some gorgeous but extremely expensive German lines that take 3 months minimum. Any advice? I had thought of working with the Cabinet Joint because I’ve read so many great things about conestoga. But, i was hoping for frameless w/plywood boxes and can’t find much info on Cabinet Joint’s new Access Line. THANK YOU

    1. pmcalary[ Post Author ]

      Hi Arielle,
      Replacing cabinetry and countertops the way they are now almost never makes sense. This is because the cost of all the things you are buying changes VERY, VERY, little from one design to another. The cost of the construction might be an extra $3000 if you are removing a wall or making other construction changes however the contractors are still doing all the rest of the work like plumbing, electric, permits, installing cabinetry, moldings, backsplash tile etc.

      In our area which is far less expensive than yours a small kitchen remodel keeping everything where it is might cost at least 30K. So saving 3K to not move things around to create a better design and a more valuable home just isn’t sensible.

      As always I stress:

      People worry about cabinet quality and price, OR IN YOUR CASE THE ADDED COST OF MAKING CHANGES, far more than they worry about their designs. This is because they aren’t kitchen or bath designers themselves and don’t understand how poor their designs usually are. If you listen to one of our podcasts this is usually a central issue. The Podcast below illustrates how different designs can be from what a homeowner might expect, while still staying within their budget. So, it makes little sense splurging on cabinets, appliances, and other expensive upgrades, when there are design improvements left on the table.
      Below is a podcast that focuses on this issue:

      https://www.mainlinekitchendesign.com/general/calls-with-paul-the-kitchen-design-podcast-episode-28-finding-a-kitchen-designer/

      I would consider calling into our helpline so that I can review you design and discuss cabinetry with you in more depth. Here’s the information:

      Call into our Friday helpline and podcast most Fridays between 2 and 4 pm Eastern Standard Time. We review designs and give design help. Call 61O-5OO-4O71 then leave a message and we will call you when a line opens.

  2. Hi

    This was a fantastic post. Thank you for explaining. As a homeowner, I know I don’t know what I don’t know!! So I’m delighted to work with designers who can save me from mistakes – it’s also a money saver! No one should waste hard earned money on bad design.

    1. pmcalary[ Post Author ]

      Thanks for the positive input. Quite often the smartest person will be the one that says “I don’t know”

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