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Building a DIY children’s play kitchen in 30 easy steps. Maybe. Part II

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Several weeks have gone by and we’ve been itching to make some progress on the play kitchen. Our social life has taken precedence and the past few weekends have been filled with copious amounts of visits, trips to the zoo and lunch guests. This hasn’t left a lot of time to move forward with the play kitchen. We finally had a respite from the more social aspects of ours lives (I’m generally an introvert) and took huge advantage of a quiet Saturday and we made an incredible amount of progress. It’s starting to take shape and another couple of weeks it will be ready to be handed over to my collaborator, the lovely Ziva for further design and decoration.

Step 4: We found some nice thick treated wood planks that once belonged to a closet or something lying on the curb outside our apartment. The first piece I cut to size (using a lot of patience and my trusty jigsaw) and attached it with four brackets to the two night tables for both support and to work as a bottom shelf.

Bottom shelf of DIY play kitchen

Step 5: It was now time to get the sink on. So that is exactly what I did. I got the sink on. Aw yeah. I thought this was going to be the most challenging action to get right but it proved to be much easier than I anticipated. I purchased a piece of MDF from a local store (this was one of my only purchases for the unit up until now), cut it to the proper length so it would fit nice and snug between the two night tables and had my trusty collaborator Ziva guesstimate the circumference of the sink and then drilled a hole smack in the middle of the circle. Several holes actually. I then meticulously cut out a circle in the mdf board. I purposefully cut less than I needed to for several reasons. First, I’m very inexperienced with the jigsaw and second – I only had one shot to get this right. Luckily, Ziva’s measuring skills were spot on (at least in this case) and I am apparently naturally talented when it comes to the jigsaw. After some trial and error and a lot of tweaking, I managed to get the bowl to fit in the hole nicely. The lips rest perfectly on the counter – which is now a sink.

Cutting a hole for the sink

A perfect hole!

Tzofi admiring the sink

Step 6: I firmly attached the sink (!) to the unit with brackets which brought even more stability.

I then stood back, smiled and called it a day.

Sink attached

Costs so far:

8 plastic wheels: $6:00
MDF Board: $15.00
Metal Bowl for sink: $5.00
Shelving brackets: $5.00

Total: $31.00

Recycled materials used:
Night tables: Purchased nine years ago
Wood planks found on the street

Next step: Figuring out how to properly attach the sink to the wood so Tzofi can’t just lift it out.

tzofi opening the sink


Building a DIY children’s play kitchen in 30 easy steps. Part I

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Building a children’s play kitchen in 30 easy steps. Maybe. Part I

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What is my parenting philosophy? Making life as awesome as possible for my daughter. We spend a lot of time in the kitchen. Cooking has long been a passion of mine and whenever I can I try to involve Tzofi. She showed an interest early on, so about a year ago Ziva (my wife for those new to this blog) built an awesome kitchen for Tzofi made from almost all recycled materials (cardboard boxes, old desk files, bottle caps and more).

We decided the time was ripe for an upgrade and purchasing a new bedroom set and getting rid of our old Ikea night stands afforded us an opportunity to get the brain wheels churning and to design Tzofi a kick ass solid kitchen she can play with for the next few years. And one that won’t put us in debt. We also recently renovated our walk in closet space and have a few old bookshelves which are in pretty bad condition so we have even more raw materials to work with.

This is a pretty big project with many steps involved and we still aren’t 100 percent sure how it’s going to turn out. I plan on documenting this DIY project here as we move forward. Today we made major progress and I got to use my new jigsaw for the first time. I like tools. Power.

These are the night tables we are dealing with:

Ikea Night Stands

Step 1

The first step was to measure the legs and decide just how much we wanted to cut off. Ziva meticulously measured the height, marked it off and I sawed off the legs with much pleasure. I even wore safety goggles which was also enjoyable.

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