DIY Kitchen Banquette Bench Using Ikea Cabinets (Ikea Hacks)


When we were in the process of planning our kitchen renovation, we struggled with what we wanted to do with this corner.

Presumably, it should be an eat-in area, but we had a nice dining setup in our living room area. We tinkered with a few ideas for the corner, including a desk area, some sort of high countertop bar seating, and a banquette. But we were being very indecisive. So we decided to just renovate the main galley area of our kitchen and then we could always revisit the nook in the future.

About nine months after the kitchen renovation concluded, we decided that a banquette would really be ideal for a couple of reasons.

  • Now that our kitchen wasnt a poorly lit and terribly depressing space, we wanted to eat in the kitchen! We had moved our dining furniture into that nook right after the renovation was done.
  • We enjoyed eating in there and quickly took advantage of the reclaimed space in our living room by installing some floor to ceiling bookshelves that have a lovely built-in look. However, our dining furniture was not working out in the new kitchen, aesthetically and functionally. It took up too much space, and the buffet, which I loved having when it was in the living room suddenly no longer worked. Wed have to move the table to access anything in the buffet, and we werent able to access one side of it at all because it was butted up against the wall.
  • We realized that a banquette would really maximize space. We could easily seat six people on the L-shaped banquette benches, plus three chairs on the other side. Seating nine people any other way in that space, such as through the use of chairs alone, would be very impractical.
  • Although we had plenty of kitchen storage now thanks to our renovation, we could create even more storage by having the banquette seating double as low cabinets.

We are not uber-DIY people, but we can hold our own on some things. We are more Lets hire a contractor who knows what hes doing! type of people than we are, Hey, lets DIY this! Were typically tired on weekday evenings, and we dont like spending multiple weekends in a row on a single project.

We checked out a few tutorials and realized that building the banquette actually would probably be a bit more DIY than were used to. We knew we could use Ikea upper cabinets as the banquette benches, but there was some sort of framing required beneath the cabinets. Why? Because if the cabinets just sit on the floor, you cant open the cabinet door. Instead, the cabinet door would hit and scrape the floor any time you wanted to open the cabinet. We didnt know anything about building any sort of framing. But, we decided to proceed with DIY-ing it. We actually had a lot of the tools that would be required and we figured if we messed it up too much, we could just hire our original Ikea contractor that installed our kitchen to finish the banquette job.

All told, we spent $652 on this job, not including some various tools and screws we had to buy along the way.

This tutorial will be presented in multiple parts and well talk about what worked for us (and what didnt work) during the process. But here are some quick and dirty steps.

  • Take measurements of your space. Drawing out your plans would be very helpful. Ikea kitchen cabinets only come in certain sizes, so you may have to accept that the benches do not fit perfecftly in your space. In our case, theres about one inch of empty space along one wall, and about three inches on the other wall.
  • Youll want to buy the Akurum Wall Top Cabinet frames that are 15 inches high. We oped for the 24 inch depth because our space could accomodate it. But, everyones cabinet quantity and width of those quantities will vary. For our space we needed
  • Two 30w x 15h x 24d (29 7/8 x 15 1/4 x 24 1/8 ) Akurum cabinets in White
  • Two 36w x 15h x 24d (35 7/8 x 15 1/4 x 24 1/8 ) Akurum cabinets in White

That combination of cabinets would best fit the L-shaped bench we wanted to build in our kitchen.

  • Pick out a door style. Ikea has TONS of door styles. We werent sure what style we wanted, so on our first shopping trip for the banquette, we purchased three different styles, with the intention of returning the ones we didnt like. We purchased Lidingo (which would match our existing Ikea kitchen cabinet doors), the Harlig, and the Abstrakt. Ultimately we decided on the Lidingo.
  • Some pieces of 2x3 wood at Home Depot / Lowes, or other home improvement store. This will be used for the frame of the banquette. We tinkered with these dimensions SO much. 2x4 wood made the bench too high for normal height people to sit on. 1x3 wood wasnt quite even enough. So the 2x3 wood worked perfectly.
  • Some pieces of 2x4 wood to build some extra supports inside the cabinets. This is optional, but highly recommended. Since these cabinets arent necessarily meant to be sat on, we added some support in the middle of the cabinets to prevent any bowing.
  • Everything else can be purchased as you go along. But these are the things youll need to get started. Well talk about our other tools and parts we used as the tutorial progresses.

I would like to point out that Ikea has a very generous return and exchange policy. So, if youre not sure about something, buy it and you can always return it later. They even take back damaged items (even when it was due to our own carelessness). So, dont be too scared to take on this project.

After buying those pieces, take a day to rest. Have a beer. Or several. Those Ikea kitchen parts are REALLY heavy when youre carrying them from your car into the house.

Then, when youre ready to make a mess in your living room, assemble the cabinets according to the instructions.

Then, temporarily place them in your desired spot to confirm that the dimensions work in the space. Well talk more about building the frame for the cabinets in our next tutorial.

Then, take a step back, admire your work, and take another break. Because, lets face it, carrying those assembled cabinets from your living room to your kitchen was not only heavy, it was very awkward to carry them!

****************

Part 2: Building a Frame for your Banquette

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