While this is usually true, you may not have the funds to drop upwards of $ 60,000 on
a kitchen gut job.
Not exact matches
It was a total
gut job including moving the
kitchen to another area and adding a bedroom and bath (originally 3 bed, 1.75 bath).
My
kitchen has the worst, teeniest, sad excuse for a pantry I've ever seen and short of a
gut job, there's nothing that's going to fix it.
Then the cabinet looked bad and we ordered new cabinets, then new counter tops — it snowballed into an awesome complete
gut job with a spectacular new
kitchen all because of a fridge that made crushed ice.
I think we are leaning that way instead of a total
gut job in the
kitchen.
We've been living with a
kitchen that needs a
gut job for almost 5 years and I have been considering Ikea for cabinetry when the time comes.
An extensive six - month
gut job included reconfiguring rooms, taking down walls and ripping out dated elements (like the dropped ceiling in the
kitchen) to create more open - concept spaces and better flow.
I hope to finally tackle our
kitchen in the next year or so (a complete
gut job will happen, all the way down to the studs and hopefully the original wood floors) but I hope it will look like yours when it's done.
The
kitchen is a
gut job.
The first year we owned the house was spent mainly on the major remodeling projects — complete
gut jobs in the
kitchen, laundry room and master bath, new / refinished floors throughout the entire house, wallpaper removal, painting the entire interior, a new deck, new lighting and on and on and on.
Our
kitchen was also a total
gut job as we ripped out everything, including the rotten floor.
The
kitchen was a total
gut job.