Work Triangle and Appliance Placement

Keep the work triangle in mind when placing appliances

1 MIN READ

This imaginary triangle links the centers of the sink, cooktop, and refrigerator and should not exceed 26 feet in total perimeter. No leg of the triangle should be longer than 9 feet or shorter than 4 feet (in some really small kitchens, this may not be possible) and no major traffic pattern should intersect the work triangle.


Select your big appliances early, so you can tailor the design to fit their dimensions. To accommodate the appliance you want when you are working within the existing footprint, it’s important to know their sizes up front, so you can design with them in mind. Not all major appliances are standard sizes; the difference of a few inches in any direction can make a design either feasible or impossible to implement.

Adapted with permission from Not So Big Remodeling, by Sarah Susanka and Marc Vassalo, published by The Taunton Press (2009).

About the Author

Sarah Susanka

For 20 years, architect and author Sarah Susanka has been leading a movement that is redefining the American home and lifestyle. Through her “build better, not bigger” approach to residential design, she reveals that the sense of “home” we seek is a quality that has almost nothing to do with square footage. Her “Not So Big” message has become a launch pad for a new dimension of understanding how we inhabit our homes, our planet, and even our day-to-day lives. Susanka is the best-selling author of nine books including The Not So Big House, Home By Design, and The Not So Big Life, which collectively have sold well over a million copies. Her books provide the language and tools for homeowners to bring their own dreams of home to life. As a cultural visionary, Susanka is regularly tapped for her expertise by national media, including “The Today Show,” CNN and The New York Times. Builder Magazine recognized Susanka as one of 30 most notable innovators in the housing industry over the past 30 years, Fast Company named Susanka to their debut list of “Fast 50” innovators whose achievements have helped to change society, and U.S. News and World Report dubbed her an “innovator in American culture.” She is also a recipient of the Anne Morrow Lindbergh Award for outstanding individual achievement toward making positive contributions to our world.

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