Budget Kitchen Renovation: Watch Us Wreck Our Kitchen and Put it Back Together

Level Up House's budget kitchen renovation. We repainted our cabinets, replaced our floors, installed a range hood, replaced the dated fluorescents with can lights, and tiled our own backsplash. And we did it for $6000 - WAY less than any contractor would've done it for!

Welcome to our largest project to date: a budget-friendly, semi-DIY kitchen renovation.

Why “semi-DIY”? Well, we won’t make or install the countertop ourselves, and we’re going to let the pros install the floor, but we’ll handle the demolition, cabinet refinishing, cabinet knobs, tiled backsplash, all patching and painting. We’re somewhere between “hand it all off to a contractor” and “cast our own countertop out of concrete”. If you can swing a hammer and know your way around Home Depot, you’re as skilled as we were when we started this project!

To give you a sense of time, most of this project was completed over the course of 2 months (and we both work full time, so we did most of this in our evenings and weekends).

If you’re reading this in 2014, good news: I’ve recently updated these articles to tell you how our renovated kitchen has held up over the past 2 years!

Budget DIY Kitchen Remodel To-Do List

  1. Tear out cabinets – Completed 2/2012!
  2. Strip varnish off cabinet doorsCompleted 2/2012!
  3. Sand cabinet doorsCompleted 2/2012!
  4. Prime cabinet doorsCompleted 2/2012!
  5. Final coat of paint on cabinet doors – Completed 2/2012!
  6. Paint the pantry door – Completed 2/2012!
  7. Install a powerful range hood – Completed 3/2012!
  8. Tear out mix of vinyl and hardwood flooring – Completed 3/2012!
  9. Laminate flooring professionally installed – Completed 4/2012!
  10. Remove popcorn ceiling – Completed 4/2012!
  11. Replace countertop, sink, and faucet – Completed 4/2012!
  12. Update lighting in the ceiling recess – Completed 1/2013! (Yes, we took an 8-month break from the kitchen project)
  13. Add pull knobs to kitchen cabinets and drawers – Completed 1/2013!
  14. Patch the ceiling hole adjacent to range hood duct – Completed 1/2013!
  15. Tile a new 6″ backsplash – Completed 4/2013! 

Kitchen remodel total cost:

  • Countertop, sink, faucet – About $2600
  • Range hood & installation – $1000
  • Electrical fixes – $200
  • Tiled backsplash – About $350
  • Cabinet refinishing supplies – $150
  • Ceiling lights, patching – About $50
  • Popcorn ceiling removal – About $300 for kitchen’s part of it, but we had popcorn removed in several rooms at once
  • Laminate Flooring – About $900 for the kitchen’s part, but we did the whole downstairs

All told, we spent about $6,000 on this kitchen remodel. Some things, like the flooring and popcorn ceiling removal, were actually done to many rooms (not just the kitchen).

What to prioritize in a kitchen remodel?

Make a list of what really irritates you in your kitchen. Maybe everything irritates you, but if you can pick just 3 or 4 things it’ll help you focus your budget.

In my kitchen, those things were:

  • The too-small 2-bowl sink. I went with a gigantic stainless steel undermount sink.
  • Overwhelming “orange and yellow” color palette
  • Bare fluorescent bulbs on the ceiling  – Total eyesore
  • Weak ventilation – I really wanted a rangehood.

When in doubt, prioritize usability. Make your kitchen enjoyable to use with a big sink and flexible faucet. Also, your choice of materials matters a lot – a few $ difference per square foot for a thing like flooring or a countertop doesn’t sound like much until you look at the full price. We were constantly trying to strike a balance between quality and savings.

Things I wanted but didn’t get:

  • A better layout – it was just too expensive to gut the whole kitchen
  • Remove the drop ceiling – too expensive for another 8″ of ceiling
  • New range/oven – Maybe later, the one I have now works fine, even if it’s worn out and not as stylish as a new one

We also didn’t replace any appliances. So many kitchen remodels involve chucking an entire set of perfectly good appliances just to get more modern features or a stainless steel finish. If your appliances are like ours and they work fine, consider replacing them when they break, not when they’re perfectly fine, and you’ll find a kitchen remodel much more affordable.

Can you DIY your kitchen renovation?

Renovating your own kitchen is hell. Everybody loves “before and after”, but not many people like to show off the ugly in-between. A DIY renovation of this scope is not for the weak. But I’m guessing if you’re reading this blog, you’re not a pansy who outsources everything short of dressing yourself in the morning to someone else. If you love rolling up your sleeves and saving thousands of dollars, you might have what it takes!

But here’s some fair warning. Our kitchen – no, most of our downstairs floor – looked like this for over 2 months. 

kitchen_renovation

For various stretches of time, we lived with holes in the wall, torn up floor (for a month!), and tools on every horizontal surface. 

kitchen_torn_up_floor

Oh, and at least a few things won’t go as you planned. Your floor will be harder to remove than you’d thought, the electrical won’t be set up the way you need it to be, an installer will get delayed. Be ready for some surprises! I warn you, do not undertake your own DIY kitchen renovation project unless you know you work well with your partner and possess an almost insanely badass work ethic. Tough work lies ahead. :)

Let’s get started!

Okay then! On that happy note, let’s get going!!!

It’s time to UPDATE THIS KITCHEN!!  YEAH LET’S DO IT, RAWWWRRR!!!! AND LET’S DO IT ON A TINY BUDGET!!! 

Will I ruin my cabinets?  Will I glue my hand to the counter? Follow along with our budget kitchen renovation and find out! Next stop, cabinet tear-out!

Budget DIY Kitchen Remodel: Tearing Out Cabinets

Welcome to our Budget DIY Kitchen Remodel project. Links to each step of the project can be found on our Budget DIY Kitchen Remodel home page.

They say the best way to begin is to begin, and for us that means it’s time to tear out our cabinets. The first step was simple: we carefully unscrewed each cabinet door from its frame and hauled each one into the garage for stripping and sanding.

Here we are with all the cabinet doors removed.

Next step? Removing the cabinet frames from the range’s wall. The first cabinet was held in place with a bunch of glue and metal.

The microwave was heavy – and its sides were somehow caked with cooking oil, which really grossed us out. Wear your work clothes, kids.

And here’s our scary ugly bare wall, now sans-microwave and cabinet. 

Here’s where we left off. The microwave and narrow cabinet to the right of it are gone, and all of the removable cabinet doors are in the garage, getting stripped, sanded, and primed. The cabinet to the right of the sink is coming down, too, we just need to make space for it and move the toaster oven out of the way.

All in all, removing our own cabinets was easy and straightforward. If you’re looking to cut costs on your kitchen remodel, tearing out some or all of your own cabinets can save you a bit of contractor costs. All you need is a drill and a bit of “elbow grease”.

Meanwhile, in the garage, I started preparing the cabinet doors for painting.

Our Home Gym Equipment Comes Home

One of our reasons for buying a house was so that we could build a home gym into one half of the garage. This month, we worked towards that goal with the purchase of some gently-used gym equipment.

Jim and I like to lift heavy things, so for years we’ve had this routine: – wake up, drive to the gym, work out, shower at the gym, drive to work, eat breakfast at work, start work day.  This is fine, but we would LOVE to do this at home instead. I found this great guy on Craigslist who was selling a suite of home gym equipment in great condition at a beyond-reasonable price:

  • Squat rack complete with safety bars
  • Commercial grade Precor elliptical
  • Olympic bars
  • Weight plate set
  • Adjustable dumbells
  • Adjustable bench

Even better, he was located just miles away and he liked our offer.  All we had to do was haul it home – my dad happened to be in town and with his rented minivan and our seller’s truck we got it all into our garage.  Like this:

And our car like this:

So we moved stuff around a few times until we finally got everything inside, and accessible, and with enough room for the car (who is now very happy).  Our rack, weighs, bench, and leg curl machine go where our storage shelves, old vanity (we destroyed it), and garbage bins used to go.

Everything else got Tetris’d into the open area to the right of the car:

Everything’s cramped but accessible.  This arrangement isn’t ideal, but I already have some ideas for improving it.

The elliptical faces a TV I brought down from upstairs, which I connected to a low-end $50 Roku for access to Netflix and other channels while I air-jog. And the speakers connect directly to any device with a headphones jack, such as an iPod, for some good, loud workout music.

Home gym advantages:

  • I’m home 2 more hours a day
  • I can blast my own music
  • I shower and get dressed at home
  • I don’t have to lug a gigantic gym bag into/out of the gym each morning
  • No more gym membership fee
  • I can grunt and yell and make faces
  • I don’t have to drive 3 miles to get to an indoor workout
  • I don’t have to share equipment with a hundred other people :D
  • Jim or I can sleep late without derailing the other one’s workout
  • It’s always open!  Even on holidays!
  • I can eat my breakfast at my table instead of my desk, with my husband instead of my coworkers

Our home gym continued to evolve – read an update about our home gym here!

Adding closet space under stairs

Dad came to visit!  He banged out an awesome front closet upgrade, and he did it so fast I didn’t even get too many photos of it.  He knocked out part of the left wall to reveal a TON of space underneath the stairs to the second floor.  He finished the wall with some plywood, which he cut to fit, and tiled the floors.   (The musty old carpet inside is history, woo!) This house is very stingy with storage space so opening up this space is incredibly useful to us.

And as if that wasn’t enough, he added two lightbulb fixtures, one to the main closet and one to the storage section.  This closet is notoriously dark, but no more!   And since he was already working with the electrical, he ALSO added a new outlet outside the closet (right over the first step) to make plugging in the stair vacuum much easier.  My dad is awesome.

That rectangular hole bordered with trim? Yeah, it totally wasn’t there a week ago.

Can you believe all this space has been sitting unused since 1977?

Now it holds our lawn chairs, Christmas tree, ski equipment, extra kitchen plates, and more!!  The closet was very scuffed and marred from years of use by previous owners, so I gave everything inside a fresh coat of paint.

Here’s our after: