New Kitchen Project
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Discussion

Ubiquitous2024

Original Poster:

419 posts

16 months

Sunday 23rd November
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One of the only things we have never done is a new kitchen. Our current one is an old Howdens one so is still pretty decent however at 20 years ish now, we feel we should invest in a new one. Ours in the centre of our house so the effort should be worthwhile. But I am petrified.

I know I am going to have to accept a few weeks of disruption, mess and no facilities but with two kids and with us busy with work I do not relish it. Then there is the obvious question of what kitchen and who to fit. I am told source the kitchen (Wren, Magnet etc) and pay a local trader to fit. So far looks like a kitchen for our space will be around 12 - 15k and fitting to be around 4-5k. I wouldn't want to go north of 25k though. Is this approach the better one to take?

Then there is the issue of flooring. Our current floor runs right across the space and will need changing. I can't work out how our existing kitchen gets removed entirely, then work is paused while a different flooring company do their work, then the new kitchen is installed by presumably the same people who remove the old one?

We have some design appointments with 2 companies so I anticipate the hard sell, marketing push and all that goes with that. I am told to expect 3 hours and a virtual tour - I really don't buy into all that but I guess it is a necessity. We would be looking to take up the interest free finance with the supplier anyway. Reading some reviews online particularly of Wren concerns me, there are some real horror stories on Google. I wouldn't want to go Wickes or B and Q, so Howdens, Magnet - anyone else?

sherman

14,741 posts

235 months

Sunday 23rd November
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Wickes were fine for us.

As for disruption.
Set up a kitchenette (microwave, kettle and the fridge somewhere convenient. Can litterally be on a camping table in the hall.
Plan to eat out most nights or batch cook things that can be microwaved easily.
Places like Toby carvery etc are cheap enough on a tuesday night.

Wish

1,704 posts

269 months

Sunday 23rd November
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Just had a magnet kitchen fixed 2 weeks ago.
We like you did the rounds and wren were by far the most expensive and high pressure. They were dismissed at the first hurdle.

B&Q were a close second to Howdens…. The Howdens were excellent to deal with and the quality of the ready made units were exceptional.
Fitting was done by a local carpenter. We had 3 quotes that were drastically different for exactly the same work.

We had a separate plumber and tiler and electrician.

Can’t recommend howdens enough. Throughout the process.

Crumpet

4,849 posts

200 months

Sunday 23rd November
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I did a massive kitchen refit last year. I pulled out the old one in January and finally finished in December - ten months without a kitchen!

But, to be honest, it’s not that bad if you can get the basics together. A portable induction hob, air fryer, microwave and kettle and you’re good to go. That being said, we decamped to the utility room on the other side of the house so we had a sink and I managed to rig up plumbing for the dishwasher. I know not everyone can do that and without running water it’s difficult.

DIY Kitchens were the original plan as they’re nice quality without the bullst. But we ended up pushing the budget a level up and went with Handmade Kitchens of Christchurch, who are excellent. For the flooring I’m a big fan of LVT, something you might want to consider.




mike9009

9,176 posts

263 months

Sunday 23rd November
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We had our Howdens kitchen fitted about 15 years ago. It is still serviceable but I need to get the floor restrained and can do that myself.

We had a young child at the time and basically set up a mini kitchen in the conservatory (microwave, kettle etc.). Careful selection of meals (mainly ready meals) kept us going with takeouts and a lot of pre prepared salads. Washing up done in the bathroom but tried to eat out the ready meal containers...... (How very uncouth!!)

We found a contractor (carpenter) who subbied out all the trades....so he had all the stress of fitting the sparks, plumbers, hiring floor sanders and decorators in..... They did a great job....

NorthDave

2,524 posts

252 months

Sunday 23rd November
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I'd go DIY Kitchens all day long. They have a planner where you can get a rough price.

The likes of Wren will entice you in with zero percent finance but will try their hardest to rip you off and I think the kitchen is worse quality than Howdens and DIY.

Can you separate the finance and the kitchen purchase with a zero percent credit card?

If it helps removing a kitchen is normally very easy so maybe you could do that, floor down and kitchen fitter to install the new one.

Little Lofty

3,746 posts

171 months

Sunday 23rd November
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I only use DIY now after having a Howdens account for 25 years. I got fed up of having to fight Howdens on price every time I wanted a kitchen so tried DIY and never went back, I’ve had around 10 kitchens off them now. The units from all of the well known brands are pretty similar, but DIY just shade it and are cheaper 9 times out of 10.
I have just planned this, it’s about £5k for the units but excluding worktops and appliances, it’s for a flip so I won’t be going overboard on appliance but it will have quartz worktops, it will be around £11k once fitted, that doesn't include electrics or plumbing as they are all new anyway.


chip*

1,526 posts

248 months

Sunday 23rd November
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Have you tried searching for a recommended local building contractor / kitchen fitter on your local FB page?
You may find small 1/2 men firms who can project manage the entire kitchen build for you. Just need to weed those recommendations from partner/family members!

Little Lofty

3,746 posts

171 months

Sunday 23rd November
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I have not used these, and I've no idea of price, but handy things.

https://www.temporarykitchenpod.co.uk/

Tony_T

890 posts

101 months

Sunday 23rd November
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Don’t take the first price offered from Howdens, Magnet etc.
Get a quote from DIY kitchens and ask them to beat it. My first Howdens quote was double what I ended up paying.

mikeiow

7,525 posts

150 months

Sunday 23rd November
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Ours was a German kitchen from a local fitter…17 years ago, still looks great!

My key suggestion is that a good fitter will make an average set kitchen look great….& vice versa!

Other tip would be to spend on quality worktops and fittings.

covmutley

3,266 posts

210 months

Monday 24th November
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We did 2 kitchens quite close to each other due to moving house. Washing up in a bath is not fun!

Second time we did paper plates and went all in on microwave meals. Made life much easier and it was only a week or so.

valiant

12,928 posts

180 months

Monday 24th November
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A decent fitter shouldn’t leave you without a sink for too long even if it’s a bodge just to keep you with water to wash up and fill a kettle. A decent fitter makes all the difference to how smoothly things go, to keeping other trades on the ball and in making a cheaper kitchen look superb. A crap fitter will make an expensive kitchen look like a dogs dinner and vice versa. To me, it’s more important to find a good fitter than a good kitchen.

As for disruption, we just sat aside a small area in the lounge with a decorating table with a microwave, a hot plate and we moved the fridge in there. Was workable in the short term and helped by using a load of disposable cups, cutlery and plates to keep washing to a minimum and a few cheeky takeaways when we simply couldn’t be bothered.

fiatpower

3,525 posts

191 months

Monday 24th November
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I'm currently doing my kitchen now, or at least i'm waiting for an electrician. Once the first fix is done i'll be fitting the kitchen myself, gone for Ikea. We used it in the utility room and it looks pretty good.

We have the luxury of moving the kitchen to the other side of the room so whilst i've removed all the worktops/ cabinets we've left the oven in place whilst the work goes on. Makes the new electrical installation a little troublesome but it's not that bad. And then we're using the utility for the washing up/storage in the short term with a large table in the kitchen as a worktop.

Sheepshanks

38,581 posts

139 months

Monday 24th November
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Something which didn’t really occur to us is the quartz supplier templates the worktops and won’t do that until the units are in place.

We were having classic kitchen / diner extension refurb done and the builder was fitting the Howdens kitchen. He told us it would be fitted in two days - which was correct, all the kitchen fitter does is plonk units in place. It was another couple of weeks to get the worktops templated made and fitted. Then the hob and sink fitted.

Ubiquitous2024

Original Poster:

419 posts

16 months

Thursday 27th November
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So it looks like Howdens will be the supplier and we have found a local builder/fitter who can do everything and project manage everything. Once the plans are drawn up he will review and we will discuss a price. Our area is likely to be fairly sizeable as we are extending the kitchen across two rooms to include our current dining area.

Problem is that I wanted to use the finance option for the kitchen itself (and pay the fitter with my own money). But Howdens don't do finance. So what's the best option as loan rates are ridiculous?

fat80b

3,123 posts

241 months

Thursday 27th November
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Ubiquitous2024 said:
Problem is that I wanted to use the finance option for the kitchen itself (and pay the fitter with my own money). But Howdens don't do finance. So what's the best option as loan rates are ridiculous?
Interest free credit card ?

Ubiquitous2024

Original Poster:

419 posts

16 months

Saturday 29th November
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Usually 12 months though isn't it. I was wanting more like 5 years!