Shaker money maker
February 11, 2012 10:33 AM Subscribe
Have you ever ordered and installed RTA (ready to assemble) cabinets?
I'm planning to order a kitchen's worth of cabinets (10 pieces with accessories) for about $2600 from LilyAnnCabinets.com. I haven't seen much online in the way of reviews which would strongly persuade me to go this route, but there aren't any bad reviews either. It's just the cheapest, highest quality option I've seen. And I have looked at Ikea, but wasn't satisfied with the box quality.
I'm confident that I'm capable of assembly and installation, but I'm more interested in the quality of RTA cabinets at this price, or if anyone has had a bad experience with Lily Ann in particular. The cabinets in question are a white shaker style, made of birch with MDF door centers.
So, has anyone had experiences with non-Ikea RTA cabinets?
I'm planning to order a kitchen's worth of cabinets (10 pieces with accessories) for about $2600 from LilyAnnCabinets.com. I haven't seen much online in the way of reviews which would strongly persuade me to go this route, but there aren't any bad reviews either. It's just the cheapest, highest quality option I've seen. And I have looked at Ikea, but wasn't satisfied with the box quality.
I'm confident that I'm capable of assembly and installation, but I'm more interested in the quality of RTA cabinets at this price, or if anyone has had a bad experience with Lily Ann in particular. The cabinets in question are a white shaker style, made of birch with MDF door centers.
So, has anyone had experiences with non-Ikea RTA cabinets?
Best answer: There is an article in Fine Homebuilding (pay to view)with recommendations on simple things that can be done to improve the durability of non-custom made RTA cabinets.
posted by pianomover at 2:23 PM on February 11, 2012
posted by pianomover at 2:23 PM on February 11, 2012
Best answer: In my experience, it's the hardware, not necessarily the material - used in the box & its attached components (drawers, lazy susans, etc) that is better scrutinized for quality. If the hardware (hinges, drawer slides, soft closures, e.g.) isn't made by Blum, Salice, Haefele, or other high end hardware manufacturers, that's the soft link in the chain.
Disclaimer: I'm an independent company that designs & installs Ikea kitchens routinely, & have only dealt with them and another commercial grade RTA company called CabParts out of Grand Junction CO.
Feel free to MeMail if you'd like additional info.
posted by yoga at 2:35 PM on February 11, 2012 [1 favorite]
Disclaimer: I'm an independent company that designs & installs Ikea kitchens routinely, & have only dealt with them and another commercial grade RTA company called CabParts out of Grand Junction CO.
Feel free to MeMail if you'd like additional info.
posted by yoga at 2:35 PM on February 11, 2012 [1 favorite]
This thread is closed to new comments.
I went this route after assembling, mounting and hanging and squaring and levelling a previous IKEA kitchen. It was... fine... but not perfect by any stretch.
posted by DarlingBri at 12:37 PM on February 11, 2012