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Dish Racks Up Off the Countertop

Dish racks can take up a lot of precious countertop space in a small kitchen. And when you don't have room for space hogging, it's time to get creative. These are a few good-looking, space-saving dish rack ideas we've spotted recently:

 
 
  • 2 A wood wall-mounted rack available at UK shop David Mellor.
  • 3 This amazing suspended rack was custom made by Kevin Mark Low. It's a wood frame hanging from steel cables that act to both suspend the rack and support each dish.

We also just spotted one more elevated dish rack in an awesome kitchen at ATLA: House Tour: Susy and Dale's Cozy Reno Studio.

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kitchen, dish rack

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Comments (37)

besides the last one, wouldn't water drip all over the counter? i don't like this.

posted by cuteasabutton on March 24th 2009 at 9:50am
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I had the same thought.

posted by Joan A. on March 24th 2009 at 10:06am
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And unless it drips directly into the sink, you're not saving any counter space because what would you put under it, to get dripped all over?

posted by Joan A. on March 24th 2009 at 10:08am
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Ditto

posted by leehou on March 24th 2009 at 10:08am
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I have the ikea asker dish drainer (http://www.ikea.com/us/en/catalog/products/40110351) over my sink and it's wonderful. In my small kitchen I have two small countertops, so every little bit helps. However, cutasabutton is correct--I don't think this setup works unless you install it over the sink.

posted by deneph on March 24th 2009 at 10:10am
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My guess is that they put a dishtowel underneath it while the dishes are dripping. Maybe they want to free up the counter space right next to the sink for food prep ... but who wants to trek every wet dish across the counter to the end once it's washed? The whole point of having it by the sink is to wash the dish and plop it in!

posted by Jane on March 24th 2009 at 10:14am
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Definitely not a good idea- especially for me. I'm a tall girl and if there is anything over the sink I hit my head on it. We have an industrial style one over the giant sink at my work, and I hit my head waaay too often.

posted by Nolann on March 24th 2009 at 10:17am
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Just use a towel and dry them and then put them back. Voila! No cluttered or wet counter and no dish rack to keep clean.

posted by Jenni Bailey on March 24th 2009 at 10:21am
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I rather like this idea- purely because it would give my dishes somewhere to drip. Right now I have a large dishrack sitting on a pan that drains into my sink. I feel like it's always got sitting water in it, and it's hard to get the dishes to dry well with no ventilation.

Odd idea- but I think I'd like to mount this above a little pan of seedlings. I would never forget to water them again...

posted by shockthebourgeois on March 24th 2009 at 10:39am
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@bigwavejen: it isn't always practical or feasible to dry every dish while you're washing them.

does anyone actually do this?

posted by abigailbelle on March 24th 2009 at 10:44am
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In my kitchen I deliberately designed it so it had no permanent draining board so I could get more counterspace. I do have a dishwasher too (which helps!) but I find when I do handwash stuff (and I drain it on a teatowel on the countertop) I'm much less likely to just leave it there draining like I used to, I actually do dry it up and put it away.

My sister also uses the dishwasher as an out-of-sight drainer if it's empty and she's just washing a few things for just herself, which I think is a bit clever.

posted by idontdobeige on March 24th 2009 at 11:03am
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I finally gave up on dish racks. Who really needs a permanent object to take up so much room? I just lay a towel on the counter next to the sink, and let the dishes dry on that. When everything is dried and put away, voila! Empty counter space!

posted by thumbelina2 on March 24th 2009 at 11:05am
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I live in a tiny tiny studio in Boston (rental!), with practically no counter space in the kitchen.

I have an IKEA Grundtal hanging dishrack above my sink, though, and I absolutely love it. It's hanging off of the Grundtal bar which has my towel and hooks for utensils on it too. An IKEA Bygel basket hangs off the edge for silverware. Everything drains directly into the sink and dries super fast as well. :)

posted by mabaihua on March 24th 2009 at 11:26am
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IDK...me thinks this would be quite messy. And much as I wash dishes...I know this would'nt work.

http:www.gettogethablog.com

posted by GetTogetha on March 24th 2009 at 11:31am
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Another vote for the Ikea Grundtal. In my last tiny kitchen, it hung right over the sink. No wet countertops!

posted by Silli on March 24th 2009 at 11:39am
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abigailbelle: my thoughts exactly.

thumbelina2: I have tried your approach but things don't dry if air can't circulate under them. It's OK for pots and pans but my glasses get foggy when I do that. What's your secret?

posted by madsarah on March 24th 2009 at 11:46am
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another vote for the IKEA grundtal...
I have one also. and yes, the water drips onto the counter, so while there are dishes there, I just put a dish towel underneath. but when the dishes are gone, the Grundtal folds up against the wall, and the counter space is available, which I feel is a lot easier than wasting precious cabinet space on a counter-dwelling dish rack.

posted by annekeo on March 24th 2009 at 11:54am
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@madsarah, I dry mine on dish towels. My glasses fog up so I just dry the inside when I put them away.

I might have to try the Ikea drainer. I have counterspace next to my sink but I'd really like to use it for cooking sometimes, you know?

posted by Tiamat_the_Red on March 24th 2009 at 11:57am
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I like the dish drainers that are built into over-the-sink cabinets. I think these are common in Europe and India.

posted by slowdown on March 24th 2009 at 12:11pm
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The over-the-sink dish drainer that my friend bought in England has a tray under it to catch the drips.

Drying dishes with a towel is not as sanitary as letting them air dry, I have been led to believe.

posted by monarda on March 24th 2009 at 12:17pm
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abigailbelle: I dry everything as I go. I only let them sit on a towel for a minute or so. But maybe I'm the exception because I'm rather (embarrassingly) obsessive about not having any water spots on my dishes.

posted by Jenni Bailey on March 24th 2009 at 12:46pm
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We have the Ikea Grundtal (http://www.ikea.com/us/en/catalog/products/70146749) under our wall cabinet to the right of our sink, sits about 3-4 inches above the counter and we use bar towels to absorb the water. They are perfect sized, and super absorbent... plus easy to swap them out and wash em.

Overall the system works well, but I do miss having a dishwasher.

posted by joshish on March 24th 2009 at 1:09pm
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Grundtal rack user, here. Another nice feature: it folds up if against the wall if you want more space.

It's healthier and more eco-friendly to let dishes drip-dry, and those are fine reasons but the truth is that I am lazy.

posted by neutopian on March 24th 2009 at 3:23pm
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Another happy Grundtal rack user here!

posted by Mid-C Frank on March 24th 2009 at 3:48pm
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This is a different approach, but I don't think it's a better approach. The only way you actually gain more space is if you can utilize the counter space where the drainer would be. Since you still need to catch the dripping water, you don't gain any useable space. One way around this would be to add a removable drip tray that slides in on a little track and is attached to the frame of the drainer. The other problem I see, which is most clearly illustrated in picture 1, is that you need the sink to be next to a wall. In picture 1, the person doing dishes would need to walk over with each dish because the distance from the sink to the wall is farther than 18". So not only would you not save space, you add extra work and a big, drippy path that needs cleaning up on your way to the drainer.

posted by RichardinLA on March 24th 2009 at 6:23pm
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I liked the "dish-rack-off-the-counter-top" idea when I saw it in Susy's kitchen. My counter top is just as limited as her's and was interested in how she did that.

http://www.thekitchn.com/thekitchn/kitchen-spotlight/look-susys-perfectly-organized-kitchen-079151?image_id=63921

I wouldn't mind putting a towel under the rack when dishes are drying since I rarely do the dishes right before I need the counter space. It's much easier to remove the towel (once the dishes are dry) than to find a place to move the rack some place else when you need the space.

posted by sunrei on March 25th 2009 at 4:47am
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I think the resistance to this idea is so odd. You can add a removable drainer tray if you're concerned about dripping. You can raise it up higher if you're tall. You can ceiling mount it if you don't have a wall next to the sink.

We have a wall mounted dish rack with a removable drainer tray and I love it! Without it, we'd either have to sacrifice most of our very limited counter space to the dish rack or set things on a dish towel to dry. A lot of the temporary apartments we stayed in here in Paris before finding our long-term place had something like this for dish drying and storage b/c kitchens are small.

posted by Hannala on March 25th 2009 at 4:52am
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I live in a studio as well and though I own the smallest dish rack I've ever seen it's still a lot of counter precious counter space I could be using for food prep. My uncle has a dish rack above his sink in Europe and let me tell you it's the most wonderful thing I've ever seen. Sadly I don't have room to put one up as my cabinets hang low and I have a very small single sink but I find the hanging racks work very well so I wouldn't discourage it right away. :)

There are lots of them available too - just takes some snooping - although Ikea is always a great first place to start as in Europe this is not a new idea.

Cheers!

posted by alisaan on March 25th 2009 at 9:09am
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these are directly over the sink and used in Italy as well as other european countries. they are closed away..smart looking.

posted by artbybabz on March 26th 2009 at 10:56am
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When I lived in my condo, I had a double bowl sink. I put my dish rack in the bowl without the garbage disposal. It worked great. I could leave it in there all the time.

posted by English Accent on March 26th 2009 at 4:39pm
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Genius invention.

I have the Asker Ikea rack -- the younger and prettier cousin to the Grundtal.
Super minimal when folded up. Where would I store a big ugly rack and plastic tray? Really this is a no-brainer.

A towel underneath is perfect and even when open it saves SO much counter space.

posted by jac7890 on March 29th 2009 at 1:03am
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When I moved in with my husband in Europe, he had this sexy French dishrack over the sink. Very cute, but a dishwasher still beats the heck out of any of these things...

posted by bromelia on March 29th 2009 at 2:02am
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When I moved into my apartment, the previous tenant had the Ikea KROKEN dish drainer already installed - perfect! Saves counter space AND has an aluminum tray underneath that catches all of the water. I just rinse it out with some cleaner every few days to keep it fresh.

http://www.ikea.com/us/en/catalog/products/30115740

posted by spanishharlem on March 29th 2009 at 9:41pm
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When I first moved to my new apartment I didn't like that there was no dishwasher, but now I prefer it. Everything gets put away quickly and I'm not constantly looking for a utensil only to have to take it out of the dishwasher and wash it. Plus, unloading the thing is such a time commitment compared to putting things away a few at a time.

I have a drainer that moves from counter to sink, which is really handy. I like to use both sides of the sink when I'm doing dished so I wouldn't want my drainer to be permanently over it but I like to put it out the way after I finish.

posted by jackie11 on April 2nd 2009 at 1:15pm
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It looks great. I love dish racks and i've bought mine at Ballard Designs. It's just lovely and makes my kitchen tidy.

posted by danalyn on May 5th 2009 at 10:51pm
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Folks, I found a solution to all of the problems listed in the comments above.....an absolutely beautiful dish drainer that actually is the star of my kitchen, one that my friends drool over. It drains water automatically to the sink, has large capacity, utilizes the full depth of your counter and not much of your counter width. It is the Rohan dish drainer from
Zojila
I love it.


www.zojila.com

posted by danielle@home on June 24th 2009 at 5:55pm
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There's always the way to save some more countertop space, all depends on your taste and creativity.
As for the countertops.... check this out http://www.livingstonesurfaces.com/

posted by livstone on November 2nd 2009 at 4:27am
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