Stupid sinks

When we decided we were coming back home and that ‘home’ was going to be Hobart Tasmania, we looked up realestate.com.au and domain.com.au and had a map of the city close by.

We also have a lifelong friend who grew up in Hobart, who gave us some very tactful warnings about where to not look (that’s a contaminated site, only bogans live there, high crime rate, no buses to speak of, flood zones) and a LOT of good places to investigate. The dream suburbs were waaaaaay out of our price range, but Bill gently pointed out that the ‘Flannelette Curtain’ was slowly opening and moving into areas that were more affordable and becoming gentrified; i.e. had independent coffee shops, cool Asian noodle bars and gift shops selling stuff like candles, fudge and throw rugs.

With our budget firmly in mind, we started researching from the comfort of our kitchen table in France.

One thing we noticed first: we were both aware of what we did NOT like way before what we did like.

My most disliked feature (apart from endless stairs, shower curtains over tall bathtubs, no heating and being on a very busy road) are kitchen sinks that are placed in the middle of the so-called ‘breakfast bar.’

Here’s one example:

I’m not saying that the kitchen isn’t gorgeous, because it is, but who wants to sit sipping coffee at a breakfast bar surrounded by dirty dishes?

And if you do want to do that, are you expected to scrub, wash, dry and hide away those dishes before anyone turns up for a cuppa?

Lovely views, and the shiny glossy white will just HIGHLIGHT that chili con carne you accidentally burnt at the bottom of the pan sadly soaking in the sink as you enter the room.

This ‘breakfast bar’ is extremely narrow, so you’ll either end up manspreading or sitting side saddle. It does have a drainage sink though, so hopefully you won’t be splashed by the dishpig when sipping your nescafe.

Oh please. A chunk of formica to hide the sink? Are we visiting a bank teller? No!

Don’t get me started on gold or brass taps. I’m no stylist, but even I know that the gold trend ended about a year ago. And look at the window behind – THAT’s where the sink should be. It’s not net curtain-twitching these days; it’s rinsing plates and spying on the neighbours at the same time.

My hatred for this trend goes right back to the designers, who obviously have never washed a dish in their lives or believe that everything including frying pans, casserole dishes and anything with avocado welded on it to can fit into the dishwasher.

My prediction is that these impractical benches will be the first to be replumbed and upgraded, moving the sink and taps to a wall or under a window. My dislike (OK, severe gut wrenching loathing) meant that I’d see a house that looked good, click through the photos and then immediately press ‘x’ when a sink was found in the bench.

Craig* thought I was being unreasonably judgemental but as he’s the star chef, my role is usually the pot washer and cleaner-upperer. Having the soaking soup pot as the centre of attention in the kitchen is both abominable and wrong.

You’ll be relieved to know that we have found a house with a sink under the window that gives us a tiny glimpse of the sea.

Nevertheless, there is some karma thrown in. The previous owners’ dishwasher conked out and they never bothered to replace it, so I’ll be doing dishes by hand and reminding myself that AT LEAST IT’S NOT AT A KITCHEN BENCH until we find the strength, Choice reviews and energy to go find a replacement.

* Just trying to protect my innocent husband unless you ventured here from Facebook

11 responses to “Stupid sinks”

  1. Our bench top is similar, a sink without a draining board, similar to what you show but with a raised breakfast bar (never used) above. It works well for us. Dirty dishes go into the dishwasher. Hand washing of difficult pots is done after dinner.

    As an advertisement goes, don’t rinse before putting your dishes go into the dishwasher, and as long as the dishwasher is correctly ‘man’ stacked, that works. Stack your soup pot in the correct place in the dishwasher and there is no need for rinsing it first unless you have burnt the pot.

    The only down is that at times not always can everything fit in the dishwasher and has to be left for the next load, sitting on the gorgeous polished bench. Hopefully this will not be when you have visitors. Actually, it is having visitors that cause a dishwasher backlog.

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    1. Does the raised breakfast bar hide the sink?

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  2. I am with you. Kitchen sinks belong beside a window – where I can look out and dream of other things. And I don’t want them to b the focal point of the kitchen.

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  3. I’d never thought about it before but yes it is best to have sink under a window. Although in our last house it was in a bench facing the family room it wasn’t an island bench. It worked quite well. nowhere near the lounge room.good luck with a dishwasher, we just bought a new one, Fisher and Pykle.

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    1. My gripe is also that most sinks are tiny – not big enough for baking trays and pots and the stuff that won’t fit in the dishwasher and most don’t have a draining board. Very impractical!

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  4. Many people have butler’s pantry, to me it’s a waste of space.
    Most houses these day are being built with a kitchen as above. Don’t know how I feel about that type of sink in an island, friend has one and hers is excellent and usually tidy. When all said and done we all have dishes of some type on the dinning room table so what’s the difference to a sink, well in one way.
    We did have our sink underneath the kitchen window and as that window was near the back door I got tired of people sticking their beaks in said window when they came to the back door, so that window was taken out as there was no view only looking into next doors bedroom….lol
    https://whiteangels-thoughts.blogspot.com/

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    1. Just poke your tongue out at the sticky beaks!

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  5. The sink in the middle of the breakfast bar is a big thing with designers and builders and has been for quite some time now. Apparently it is supposed to be so the dishwasher (person) is not excluded from anything going on in the adjacent dining/family room. I don’t care who first thought of that, they were WRONG! Sinks belong by a window, leave the breakfast bars open for prep work or for laying out trays of food when visitors are expected.
    My current favourite dream house has the sink in the middle of a very long breakfast bar in a U shaped kitchen, it could be placed aginst the wall on the short section of the U but there is no window there. I have three other houses I’m watching via realestate.com and two of them have sinks by the window, but one doesn’t have drainboards which is a little inconvenient for me, but workable AND it is right next door to “no-one”. One of them has only a small single sink in the breakfast bar, but it also has a giant butler’s pantry off the kitchen so that’s a plus as all dirty dishes can go there where the bigger sink and dishwasher are.

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    1. Agree! And I like the sound of a U-shaped kitchen

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  6. G’Day Kath,

    Very amusing that you don’t like sinks on those benches. I don’t really care, but you may be pleased to know that I don’t have a bench at all. To me the kitchen is to cook and clean dishes (in the dishwasher of course). It is one of my least favourtie rooms in any house.

    :o)

    Cheers

    PM

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    1. Plasman, if you read my latest blog, I compare myself with you – you adoring maths and me hating it, and also, the kitchen is my second-favourite spot in the house, second only to the living room. The garden shed, on the other hand….

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