Anotherlevel
New member
Hi,
I'm planning on some built in cabinetry along the side of our hallway. We have a nice long run of wall (around 10 metres in total) that I'll be using for a combination of bookcases, cabinets and drawers for storage.
At the start of the run there is our fuse board and then a little way further our boiler. I think it would make sense to just build a cabinet around them - floor to ceiling - and then use the additional storage space inside for the vacuum cleaner and a couple of other 'cupboard under the stairs' type items - bulky but easily moved if access needed to the consumer unit or meter.
To make it easier to move things in and out my wife would like the doors to fully reach the floor with no toe kick / base - essentially, just to box in around the unit. So each cabinet would be around 700-800mm wide, and around 2300 tall. I think for that width it would need to be a double door unit?
I haven't come across any examples of this being done. Is this particularly difficult? We have an engineered wood floor that is very flat (don't worry, I checked!) and so whilst I'll be sure to leave around 5-10mm clearance at the bottom I don't think that catching on the floor will be an issue.
My one concern is that without a bottom lip there will be nothing for the door to bear against at the bottom when it closes. I could put a central strut floor to ceiling but that would seem to defeat the whole point of a big cabinet - would make it a tight squeeze if an electrician needed access in the future or the boiler needed replacing.
I'm planning on some built in cabinetry along the side of our hallway. We have a nice long run of wall (around 10 metres in total) that I'll be using for a combination of bookcases, cabinets and drawers for storage.
At the start of the run there is our fuse board and then a little way further our boiler. I think it would make sense to just build a cabinet around them - floor to ceiling - and then use the additional storage space inside for the vacuum cleaner and a couple of other 'cupboard under the stairs' type items - bulky but easily moved if access needed to the consumer unit or meter.
To make it easier to move things in and out my wife would like the doors to fully reach the floor with no toe kick / base - essentially, just to box in around the unit. So each cabinet would be around 700-800mm wide, and around 2300 tall. I think for that width it would need to be a double door unit?
I haven't come across any examples of this being done. Is this particularly difficult? We have an engineered wood floor that is very flat (don't worry, I checked!) and so whilst I'll be sure to leave around 5-10mm clearance at the bottom I don't think that catching on the floor will be an issue.
My one concern is that without a bottom lip there will be nothing for the door to bear against at the bottom when it closes. I could put a central strut floor to ceiling but that would seem to defeat the whole point of a big cabinet - would make it a tight squeeze if an electrician needed access in the future or the boiler needed replacing.