Remodel Your Kitchen Without Spending a Fortune
Pull-Down Spray Kitchen Faucets Offer Functional Beauty
When Heidi and Michael Smith bought their home in Lake Forest, Ill.,
a year and a half ago, they knew the English Tudor home, built in
1928, was in desperate need of updating.
“The kitchen was terrible. The configuration was small, there was
no counter space, and it was not family friendly or functional,”
says Heidi Smith. When they first moved in, the Smiths, and their
now six-year-old triplets, Kate, Belle and Michael, frequently ate
meals sitting on the floor. “It was so pathetic,” says Smith.
Fast forward 18-months and it’s a whole different story. The Smiths
entered This Old House’s Dream Kitchen contest and won. Their prize:
a complete kitchen makeover valued at $200,000. Work crews spent
three months in their house, knocking down walls, putting in new
cabinets and installing new appliances. “They replaced everything,
including the kitchen sink, which is the focal point of our new
kitchen.”
“The window the kitchen sink is under is at the center of the room,
so we wanted it to make a statement,” says Heidi. “After thumbing
through a bunch of catalogs, we came upon this large, single-basin,
apron front farm sink by Kohler that was just perfect.” The Smith’s
opted for the new, Kohler Vinnata pull-down spray kitchen faucet,
available in polished nickel, the same finish as the rest of the
hardware in the room. Smith says its high arch spout and traditional
design lines complement the architecture and classic appeal of her
home.
She also likes the fact that the sprayer is attached to the faucet,
and reaches all around the sink. “And since the handle is on the
side of the faucet, you can turn the water on and off with your
wrist, and not get your dirty hands on the handles.”
“In the kitchen, we need both beauty and brains from the same product.
So in the last 10 years, Kohler has really gone back to the drawing
board and rethought the kitchen faucet,” says Keith Kometer, marketing
director for faucets at Kohler. “We looked carefully at the activity
that occurs in the kitchen sink, and we talked with Kohler showrooms
and consumers to survey what they expect from a kitchen faucet.
The strongest trend in kitchen faucets is increased function.”
“I cook a lot of big meals and like having the ability to clean
pots and pans easily,” says Smith.
And since time is money, pull down faucets bring an added benefit
to a consumer’s wallet: they are easy to install on new and existing
sinks. The installation ring can be spun and finger-tightened to
the point where the final compression can be easily completed with
a Phillips-head screw-driver. And connecting the supply lines is
easy: a quick-connect feature allows the installer to literally
snap-on to flexible hoses three feet below the faucet, well away
from the sink itself. That means less time spent on a plumbers dime
or less time for a do-it-yourselfer installing the faucet themselves.
“We didn’t have to do any of the work ourselves,” says Smith. “But
I’m confident we could have handled the installation for this faucet
if we had to.”
HOME : Cleaning Guide