The L shaped Kitchen Floor Plan puts two workstations on one wall and the third on an adjacent wall. This Kitchen Floor Plan is more space efficient than the U shaped floor plan. However, this floor plan is not best suited for smaller kitchens. Allow an open counter space of about 4 feet between workstations that share the same wall. Arrangement of the workstations is also critical here and the flow should be from the refrigerator to the sink, to the cooktop and the serving area.
The Island Kitchen Floor Plan features a freestanding kitchen workstation usually the cooking range or the sink. This Kitchen Floor Plan facilitates the work triangle for larger kitchens as it allows a centralized access to the workstations. However, this Kitchen floor plan is not suited for kitchens where the workstations are on opposite sides of the wall as it obstructs work.
The Galley Kitchen Floor Plan is when workstations are placed at parallel walls i.e two workstations on one side of the wall and the third workstation on the other wall. This kitchen floor plan is best suited when the kitchen spacing is small and narrow and gives the kitchen a more open feel. On the flip side however, it restricts traffic in the kitchen. To maximize this kitchen floor plan, consider leaving a space of 4 feet between opposing workstations. Also consider pairing the refrigerator and the sink workstations together.