Update: This post was so popular that we had a tremendous amount of feedback when we posted it online–which is great! We know we’ve struck upon an important subject when it stirs conversation. We learned that there is yet another MAJOR reason that upper wall cabinets beat out open shelves: your loving pets! If you’ve already read our other reasons and want to skip to the new section, check it out by clicking here. Otherwise, read on!
Should You Install Open Shelving or Upper Kitchen Cabinets?
Have you recently considered deciding between installing a full set of upper cabinets or opting for open shelving in the kitchen? The popularity of open shelving has been on the rise recently, and you have likely seen more than one photo of beautiful kitchens with dinnerware on full display.
Is Open Shelving Worth It
From a comfortable distance, the aesthetic of open shelving can be very attractive–but there are significant problems with this approach.
Let’s start our review with some questions to ask yourself before we proceed:
- Are you comfortable cleaning surfaces far more frequently?
- Are you confident in the security of fragile items left in the open?
- Do you want to dust your dinnerware on a weekly basis?
- Are you confident that grease, water, or other liquids from your sink or food prep surfaces won’t reach items left out?
With these questions in mind, let’s have a look at the clear advantages of kitchen cabinets over open shelving.
Essential Storage for Unsightly Necessities
One of the basic truths of home living is that not every component of our daily lives is aesthetically pleasing. We keep our cleaning chemicals under counter cabinets, and we put a lot of our toiletries away in cubbies.
It isn’t uncommon to have mismatched dinnerware, such as hand-me-downs, that simply doesn’t look great alongside your standard plates and bowls.
Clutter-Free Appearance
Contrary to the opinions of some designers who heavily favor a rustic look, there is such a thing as being too eclectic in the kitchen. If everything is out in the open, the appearance of an ordered disorder can quickly get away from you.
If you receive a gift from a friend that looks unseemly alongside everything else but resorted to open shelving, you’re in a bind. Beautiful upper kitchen cabinets provide a sensible solution to this problem from day one.
Opting for an open shelving plan demands that you have an active plan for arranging the utility of our items. Do you really want to have to check off a mental list every single time you grab something about where it needs to be returned?
Or be forced to pile things up in a pleasing geometric pattern again every time you return a clean plate to its resting place?
Easier Kitchen Cleaning
Keeping your kitchen tidy is one side of the equation, and cleaning is another entirely. Managing all of the dust accumulation on lower shelves and grime that develops on upper open shelves is nothing to scoff at. Then consider that all those dishes you’ve left open to the elements are under the same dust fall.
Do you keep your windows open a lot in the hot summer months? Remember that a window screen is there primarily to prevent insects from crowding your kitchen—it isn’t going to keep out a great deal of dust.
Writer Ayn-Monique Klahre at TheKitchn did her own investigative report on the dustiness of open shelving. Two weeks of open windows is enough to cover a room in a significant layer of blown-in dust. Even a countertop or shelf that may look clean to the naked eye can yield a dusty fingertip on a wipe.
Beyond simply dust, your cooking process or dishwashing can sometimes spray undesirable juices, grease, or food particles. Open shelving leaves your dinner and cookware open to dangerous bacteria before they get used. That’s a dicey proposition for items involved in the eating process.
This article on refrigeration and food safety from the U.S. Department of Agriculture recommends tempered glass shelves for exactly that reason. We don’t know about you, but we trust that governmental body with safety recommendations!
Cohesive Kitchen Design
Your kitchen forms the core aesthetic of your home. There are plenty of ways to get the design wrong, including poor storage space and violating the kitchen work zone.
Going with open shelves reduces your available storage sufficiently that you likely will need to make numerous trips around the kitchen to access items for a single meal prep. The work triangle goes out the window, and the utility of your kitchen starts to give way to appearance. But the kitchen isn’t a museum – it’s a busy spot.
Great-looking upper cabinets solve functional problems perfectly while also beautifying the space. You’re winning in both areas.
Safer Storage Option
Open shelves may seem like an adventurous way to show off your collection of cool ceramics since the bottom-heavy arrangements can be perilous every time you go to access shelved items from your pile. An errant hand move while grabbing something can bring whole stacks crashing down.
If you are tempted to install some cheap open shelves yourself, also bear in mind that they are not magical bearers of every weight; they still necessitate wall anchors, which may require you to consider your installation costs with a professional.
Do you live in an earthquake-prone region of the States? Your glassware, even the stuff you don’t plan on touching and is merely ornamental, can turn into a disaster on floating shelves.
While a lip on the shelving can remediate the perils of a minor tremor, this solution now undermines the shelves’ original aesthetic purpose.
Safe Display Options
Displaying your fine plates and stemware is a lot of fun and adds a great new visual dimension to the kitchen. But it doesn’t have to compromise with safety or cleaning work. Installing a set of upper cabinets that includes glass doors provides you the same opportunity to display small vignettes safely.
Whether with open glass, frosted (the more modern approach), or textured glass for a retro feel, the remodel can still provide you with even the rustic feel open shelving may have provided.
Are you interested in more inspiration about how to employ glass cabinet doors to really brighten your kitchen and open up the space with an inviting appearance? Check out our article “A Touch of Glass.”
NEW: Pet-Friendly Kitchens & Homes
For dog or cat owners, making sure that their kitchen is animal-friendly may be second nature. You may have your feeding station sorted out so that it isn’t in the way of your cooking, or you may have gates set up to prevent your little family members from getting underfoot while you’re working with hot utensils.
But open shelving deserves its own loud voice in this discussion: the trendy kitchen feature of open shelves could be a nightmare waiting to happen in a home with pets.
If you have pets, especially cats, forget the shelves. Put them far from your mind, lock the thought tight, and throw away the key.
Cats love heights, so they would find a way to get up those shelves and have no problem knocking off any obstacles. 3 am plate breakage!
And those of us with pets know that pet hair gets everywhere. Cats also aren’t the only potential culprits in destruction. Wagging tails on a lovable dog have minds all their own.
Better Investment
The cost of kitchen remodels is not just a fun expense; it’s an investment in your home. That investment value relies on the house’s desirability and, foremost, the kitchen. It is the space where typically the most time is spent socializing and engaging in activities and draws the most attention from realtors and potential home buyers.
Notwithstanding all of the other points you have read, open shelving is not everyone’s cup of tea. Potential buyers may take one look at a kitchen with open shelving and mentally tick a box that reads, “Well, there’s the cost of the home plus the remodel to put in cabinets.”
If you look at our case study on the installation of high-gloss white cabinets in a San Diego home, the ROI on your kitchen remodel is nothing to shrug at.
Open shelves may be neat aesthetic (but they make your kitchen a lot more work), but they won’t increase the space’s selling point. Meanwhile, after installing cabinets, you can still recoup tens of thousands of dollars years down the line.
Ultimately, your kitchen should reflect your tastes, sensibilities, and lifestyle. You spend a great deal of time in it and should love how it looks and works for you without reservation.
A beautiful set of upper kitchen cabinets can provide all that and more without giving you the headache of extra cleaning, storage problems, or risks of falling debris.
Are we a little biased? Sure. But we love our products and value our customers.