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Design :
Space Planning :
NKBA Guidelines

National Kitchen & Bath Association
Planning Guidelines
No
one wants a brand-new kitchen with appliance doors that bump into
cabinet doors, or an island so close to the wall that it can’t be used
for dining. Good space planning will help you develop the best layout
for your kitchen, so take the time to read this condensed version of the
NKBA guidelines. (The full guidelines are available on the
NKBA site.)
Designed to maximize safety and
functionality in home kitchens, the guidelines represent ideal layout
solutions to kitchen concerns from storage space to door clearance.
Don’t fret if budget limitations and the constraints of an existing
kitchen require some compromises and tradeoffs: The only rules you must
follow are building codes.
- Door/Entry: A doorway should be at least 32 inches
wide.
- Door Interference: No entry door should interfere with
appliances, nor should appliance doors interfere with one another.
- Distance Between Work Centers: In a kitchen with three
work centers*, the sum of the distances between them should total no
more than 26 feet. No leg of the work triangle should measure less
than 4 feet nor more than 9 feet. When the kitchen includes
additional work centers, each additional distance should measure no
less than 4 feet nor more than 9 feet. No work triangle leg should
intersect an island or peninsula by more than 12 inches.
* The distances between the three primary work centers (cooking,
cleanup/prep and refrigeration) form a
work triangle.
- Separating Work Centers: A full-height, full-depth, tall
obstacle [i.e. a pantry cabinet or refrigerator] should not separate
two primary work centers.
- Work Triangle Traffic: No major traffic patterns should cross
through the work triangle.
- Work Aisle: The width of a work aisle should be at least
42 inches for one cook and at least 48 inches for multiple cooks.
- Walkway: The width of a walkway should be at least 36
inches.
- Traffic Clearance at Seating: In a seating area where no
traffic passes behind a seated diner, allow 32 inches of clearance
from the counter/table edge to any wall or other obstruction behind
the seating area. If traffic passes behind the seated diner, allow
at least 36 inches to edge past or at least 44 inches to walk past.
- Seating Clearance: Kitchen seating areas should
incorporate at least the following clearances: At 30-inch-high
tables/counters, allow a 24-inch-wide by 18-inch-deep knee space for
each seated diner. At 36-inch-high counters, allow a 24-inch-wide by
15-inch-deep knee space. At 42-inch-high counters, allow a
24-inch-wide by 12-inch-deep knee space.
- Cleanup/Prep Sink Placement: If a kitchen has only one sink,
locate it adjacent to or across from the cooking surface
and
refrigerator.
- Cleanup/Prep Sink Landing Area: Include at least a
24-inch-wide landing area to one side of the sink and at least
an18-inch-wide landing area on the other side.
- Preparation/Work Area: Include a section of continuous
countertop at least 36 inches wide and 24 inches deep immediately
next to a sink.
- Dishwasher Placement: Locate nearest edge of the primary
dishwasher within 36 inches of the nearest edge of a sink. Provide
at least 21 inches of standing space between the edge of the
dishwasher and countertop frontage, appliances and/or cabinets
placed at a right angle to the dishwasher.
- Waste Receptacles: Include at least two waste receptacles.
Locate one near the sink(s) and a second for recycling in the
kitchen or nearby.
- Auxiliary Sink: At least 3 inches of countertop frontage
should be provided on one side of the auxiliary sink and 18 inches
on the other side.
- Refrigerator Landing Area: Include at least 15 inches of
landing area on the handle side of the refrigerator or 15 inches of
landing area on either side of a side-by-side refrigerator or 15
inches of landing area no more than 48 inches across from the front
of the refrigerator or 15 inches of landing area above or adjacent to
any undercounter refrigeration appliance.
- Cooking Surface Landing Area: Include a minimum of 12
inches of landing area on one side of a cooking surface and 15
inches on the other side. In an island or peninsula, the countertop
should also extended a minimum of 9 inches behind the cooking
surface.
- Cooking Surface Clearance: Allow 24 inches of clearance
between the cooking surface and a protected noncombustible surface
[ex: a range hood] above it. At least 30 inches of clearance is
required between the cooking surface and an unprotected/combustible
surface [ex: cabinetry] above it. If a microwave hood is used, then
the manufacturer’s specifications should be followed.
- Cooking Surface Ventilation: Provide a correctly sized,
ducted ventilation system for all cooking surface appliances; the
recommended minimum is 150 CFM.
- Cooking Surface Safety: Do not locate the cooking surface
under an operable window. Window treatments above the cooking
surface should not use flammable materials. A fire extinguisher
should be located near the exit of the kitchen away from cooking
equipment.
- Microwave Oven Placement: The ideal location for the
bottom of the microwave is 3 inches below the principle user’s
shoulder but no more than 54 inches above the floor. If the
microwave is below the countertop the bottom must be at least 15
inches off the finished floor.
- Microwave Landing Area: Provide at least a 15-inch
landing area above, below or adjacent to the handle side of a
microwave.
- Oven Landing Area: Include at least a 15-inch landing
area next to or above the oven. At least a 15-inch landing area not
more than 48 inches across from the oven is acceptable if the
appliance does not open into a walkway.
- Combining Landing Areas: If two landing areas are
adjacent, determine a new minimum by taking the longer of the two
landing area requirements and adding 12 inches.
- Countertop Space: A total of 158 inches of countertop
frontage, 24 inches deep, with at least 15 inches of clearance
above, is needed to accommodate all uses.
- Countertop Edges: Specify clipped or round corners rather
than sharp edges.
- Storage: The total shelf/drawer frontage is: 1,400 inches
for a small kitchen (150 square feet or less); 1,700 inches for a
medium kitchen (151 to 350 square feet); and 2,000 inches for a
large kitchen (351 square feet or more).
The recommended distribution for the shelf/drawer
frontage is:
| |
Small |
Medium |
Large |
|
Wall |
300 in. |
360 in. |
360 in. |
|
Base |
520 in. |
615 in. |
660 in. |
|
Drawer |
360 in. |
400 in. |
525 in. |
|
Pantry |
180 in. |
230 in. |
310 in. |
|
Misc. |
40 in. |
95 in. |
145 in. |
- Storage at Cleanup/Prep Sink: Of the total recommended
shelf/drawer frontage, the following should be located within 72
inches of the centerline of the main cleanup/prep sink: at least 400
inches for a small kitchen; at least 480 inches for a medium
kitchen; and at least 560 inches for a large kitchen.
- Corner Cabinet Storage: At least one corner cabinet
should include a functional storage device. This does not apply if
there are no corner cabinets.
- Electrical Receptacles: GFCI (ground fault circuit
interrupter) protection is required on all receptacles servicing
countertop surfaces.
- Lighting: Every work surface should be well-illuminated
by appropriate task lighting.
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