When you have a large kitchen space, you have the peace of mind and freedom to do what you envisioned it to be. But with a small kitchen space, it is challenge to keep the functionality in the top priority and the aesthetics is also paid attention for. With a small space, you won’t have enough rooms for appliances, countertops and Kitchen Island.  

The biggest advantage you have with remodeling a small-spaced kitchen is that you’re not going to spend as much money with a large-spaced one. The kitchen is the most expensive room to remodel, so the smaller you remodel, the lesser you’ll spend. The problem is; you have to plan a kitchen that makes it as efficient as the large spaced ones. Hiring professionals of Denver kitchen remodeling is really important when it comes to these projects.  

Size of Small Kitchen 

The benchmark of the average size of kitchen is 10×10 or 100 square feet. A small kitchen has the space of less than 70 square feet. That’s why an effective floor planning is important because it makes up 90% of the design.  

The efficient layouts for a small-sized kitchen are one-wall, corridor or galley and L-shaped. The one-wall layout is the smallest layout you can have. It has one wall of cabinets, counters and appliances. The corridor layout allows the kitchen “triangle” movement and is preferable than the one-wall layout. It has two walls of cabinets, appliances and counters with a center aisle. Finally, the L-shaped layout, this is a classic layout for a small kitchen. There are 2 lines of counter-topped cabinets. These cabinets are arranged at 90 degrees to each other.  

  1. Find Areas to Scale Down 

Sinks and other countertop spaces can make up most of the kitchen space. Choose the cabinets and appliances that are of right size. There are economical fridges and dishwashers that will help you conserve space for the other furniture. If you have out-of-kitchen areas, you can combine them with the kitchen or use that space for other stuffs you don’t use every day.  

  1. Determine Your Lifestyle 

Obviously, the kitchen space is for cooking and food-related preparations. So reflect on your cooking lifestyle before you decide to install a breakfast bar or kitchen island. If your top priority is storage, then invest on maximizing the kitchen cabinets over costly appliances.  

  1. Using Stock Cabinetry 

There are easy-to-install cabinets that you can use. You can buy these at home improvement stores, and the good thing is that it can be installed on your own. Just expect that you will put a lot of work when it comes to putting the cabinets together.  

  1. Use Lighter Colors 

The trick to make the small space looks large is to increase the kitchen’s light intensity by using neutral colors for the counters and other surfaces and bright-colored wood materials for the cabinets. Get as much as natural light as you can too. Make sure that the lights you install match the whole theme too.