Design Assistant

Get inspired with thousands of photos from Southern Living and more of your favorite magazines
Rooms
Room Detail
Solutions
More Laundry-Room Organization Tips:
Concealed With a Curtain
Hidden Laundry Room
Neat Ideas for the Laundry Room
Conquering Clutter
Jazzed-Up Laundry Room
Open and Closed Solution
 
Peek Inside Some of our Idea House Laundry Rooms:
2002 Birmingham Idea House
2003 Chapel Hill Idea House
2003 Austin Idea House
2003 Tallahassee Idea House
2006 Florida Idea House
2006 Texas Idea House
 



Southern Accents

Georgetown Gem
Tour Beatrix Farrand's rigorous and sensory-laden Dumbarton Oaks with landscape architect John Howard


 
A Household Dream: Hide Large Appliances
New cabinets and updated appliances made this typical utility closet stylish and out of sight.
By Amy Bickers Mercer / photography Laurey W. Glenn / styling Lisa Powell Bailey
   
  At one end of this eat-in kitchen, a closet did a less-than-stylish job of hiding the washer and dryer.
   
  Would you ever guess that this beautiful built-in hutch holds a perfectly organized laundry space?
   
  The bottom doors of this custom cabinet open to reveal new front-loading appliances.

Louvered doors in the kitchen might as well be painted with a big red arrow and a sign reading: Ugly washer and dryer covered with mounds of laundry inside! Visitors, beware of falling underwear!

Or is that just my house?

There's something about the laundry closet that attracts embarrassing mess. That's why I love what Brad and Shannon Smith did in their Marietta, Georgia, home. They turned their utility closet into a built-in piece of furniture that looks good and works hard. Local cabinetmaker Mike Welborn sketched a drawing based on the couple's wants and the measurements of the existing space.

The end result does a masterful job of hiding large appliances. Upper cabinets hold detergent and supplies. On the bottom, bifold doors access the machines. Molding between the units and on the bottom of the cabinet is separate and can be easily removed in case the machines need repair.

Domestic Dreams
I know I'm getting old because my fantasies regularly consist of owning a front-loading washing machine and dryer. These appliances use 67% less electricity and 68% less water than typical washers and dryers. That saves about 17,000 gallons of water a year in one household or, in financial terms, between $120-$150.

The machines also hold larger loads, and it takes less time to dry each load, meaning you might not have to spend the entire weekend doing laundry.

Now, who doesn't think that's the stuff of household daydreams?

Recommended Search Results:


Sources:
Cabinetmaker was Mike Welborn, Welborn Construction, Marietta, Georgia, (770) 587-3874; for washer/dryer information visit www.whirlpool.com.

This article is from the March 2005 issue of Southern Living.

Advertisement