Venture Horizon Kitchen Cart with Pantry - Beadboard 4124wh (White/Natural) (18" x 18" x 35" H)
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| ASIN | B000FEQ104 |
|---|---|
| Customer Reviews |
3.5 out of 5 stars |
| Date First Available | November 1, 2000 |
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Customer reviews
3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5 out of 5
3 global ratings
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Top reviews from the United States
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Reviewed in the United States on July 3, 2012
I should have read the last review before beginning this assembly! I have assembled many pieces and none were this much of a pain! The instructions are vague at best. What they don't tell you is that if you do not follow the instruction EXACTLY, there is no going back. Case in point, the white stoppers that support the pull out front have to go into the correct hole. If you accidently put them in the wrong hole (a very easy mistake to make since there is no labeling)they cannot be pried out. It caused me a major problem in the rest of the install. Parts are not well marked. So, as the last reviewer said, make sure you lay out the pieces ahead of time & PAY ATTENTION to which part goes where. Take your time & double-check each move before you make it. Also, as the last reviewer said, use something to prevent marking when tapping pieces together. Install took me 3 hours (due to the stopper mishap). In spite of the installation difficulties, this piece does look nice.
Reviewed in the United States on April 27, 2013
My husband was expecting a worse assembly experience after reading other reviews. However, he took his time and had no problem. (He has put together a LOT of furniture.) It took about 2 and a half hours. The unit is very attractive when done. We found the Rubbermaid trash container on Amazon that fits perfectly. (Rubbermaid 295700BG Soft Molded Plastic Wastebasket, Rectangular, 10 1/4 gal) The drawer pulls are plastic and the screws holding them on are very short, so you have to be careful not to be too rough on them. The drawers are pretty light duty so I wouldn't put anything heavy in them. The casters rub on the wood base so it won't turn as well as it should. If you drilled new holes, it would work better. The butcher block top is real wood and looks nice after you rub mineral oil into it.
We have the cart in the middle of the kitchen as an island where the trash container is close to the sink and food prep area. If you want to place it with the back to a wall, you won;t be able to use the paper towel holder as the roll of towels protrudes.
Over all, we are very happy with this kitchen cart and it does look good.
We have the cart in the middle of the kitchen as an island where the trash container is close to the sink and food prep area. If you want to place it with the back to a wall, you won;t be able to use the paper towel holder as the roll of towels protrudes.
Over all, we are very happy with this kitchen cart and it does look good.
Reviewed in the United States on June 9, 2007
... because it arrives in a Million Little Pieces.
"Easy assembly" my butt. This is a decent cabinet, and quite useful (if you don't mind pressboard), but the assembly is fairly complicated. It took me about two hours. Here are some words of caution for those of you who feel tool-time enough to give this one a try:
(1) Be careful with the glue bottle. The lid on mine wasn't pushed in properly (it sits in the bottle like a cork), and it glooped all over the first piece I tried to glue. Snip the tip off just a tiny bit larger so you won't have to squeeze it so hard, but don't snip too much or you'll have glooping for other reasons.
(2) Sort all the hardware, pegs, and wood pieces before you start assembling, and label the big ones with post-its to save yourself ten thousand trips back to the box it came in.
(3) Some of the parts are mis-numbered in the assembly instructions. If you follow the pictures and proceed slowly and logically, you should be all right.
(4) Use a buffering cloth when hammering parts together, and don't use too big of a hammer. It is really easy to damage, dent or even break this one while assembling it.
The instructions are fairly clear, and the only tools you'll need are a lightweight hammer and a phillips-head screwdriver. But plan to spend 2-3 hours working on this. If you're the kind of person who likes things to arrive in one piece, or if you're a woman whose father didn't teach her how to wield a toolbox (fortunately mine did), then you'll want to think carefully before ordering.
But it does look quite nice in my kitchen now.
"Easy assembly" my butt. This is a decent cabinet, and quite useful (if you don't mind pressboard), but the assembly is fairly complicated. It took me about two hours. Here are some words of caution for those of you who feel tool-time enough to give this one a try:
(1) Be careful with the glue bottle. The lid on mine wasn't pushed in properly (it sits in the bottle like a cork), and it glooped all over the first piece I tried to glue. Snip the tip off just a tiny bit larger so you won't have to squeeze it so hard, but don't snip too much or you'll have glooping for other reasons.
(2) Sort all the hardware, pegs, and wood pieces before you start assembling, and label the big ones with post-its to save yourself ten thousand trips back to the box it came in.
(3) Some of the parts are mis-numbered in the assembly instructions. If you follow the pictures and proceed slowly and logically, you should be all right.
(4) Use a buffering cloth when hammering parts together, and don't use too big of a hammer. It is really easy to damage, dent or even break this one while assembling it.
The instructions are fairly clear, and the only tools you'll need are a lightweight hammer and a phillips-head screwdriver. But plan to spend 2-3 hours working on this. If you're the kind of person who likes things to arrive in one piece, or if you're a woman whose father didn't teach her how to wield a toolbox (fortunately mine did), then you'll want to think carefully before ordering.
But it does look quite nice in my kitchen now.