Creating a laundry room can be done in one of two ways:

You are looking for laundry design and planning, which you already have space for.

You must choose how much space to allocate for your laundry room and where to place it if you are starting from scratch with your design. The strategy is essentially the same in both scenarios; just use a little common sense to adjust it to your specific situation. The tasks that are covered on the laundry room design page serve as the foundation for the design process.

Step 1 Fixtures and Appliances

Where to find the washing machine and dryer?

Determining the location of the washer and dryer is the first stage in “how to build a laundry room.”

The dimensions of laundry appliances vary considerably from country to country. For additional information on this, see the laundry room dimensions page. Consider whether stacking the laundry equipment and installing them on top of a pedestal will improve the functionality of your laundry room design (a bit more on pedestals in the box below).

When constructing your laundry room, keep in mind the air extraction for your tumble dryer (if necessary) and the water supply for your washing machine (you may need both hot and cold supplies – check your machine specs).

Whether you choose to have your washer and dryer integrated with the surrounding cabinets is entirely up to you. Many individuals leave the appliances in their current state because the tops are done.

Getting to the Sink

In a laundry, a sink is a useful piece of equipment. There will be a trade-off between a sink and counter space if you don’t have much room. Ask yourself these questions as you consider which laundry sink to install:

Have you got a draining board handy?

A deep sink—would it be helpful? It helps if the sink and faucet configuration makes it simple to fill a bucket and drain out dirty water without it splashing in the laundry room sink, which is frequently used for filling buckets for floor washing. There may be a sink nearby in the kitchen or bathroom, depending on where you intend to place the laundry room.

Even if you have a gorgeous laundry room, the person doing the ironing may decide to do it elsewhere, or you may decide to engage in extreme ironing (for fun, look it up on Google if you have a minute or two). To avoid adding an extension connected to your laundry basket, make sure a power outlet is provided close to your preferred ironing spot.

The iron and ironing board will probably be kept in the laundry room no matter where the ironing is done. Which of these solutions for storage would be most useful in your laundry room?

An attached wall-mounted storage stand (these often incorporate the iron as well).

A shelving unit concealed inside a cabinet door. This is a good choice because it conceals everything. It means that the interior of the cabinet must be constructed such that there is enough room for the ironing board between the door and the shelves. The cabinet door won’t close if you don’t do this. Before you damage the hinges, it is obvious that the door must be able to support the weight of the ironing board.

A beautiful and low-cost approach might be to leave a tall gap in the cabinetry. Alternatively, you can consider a pull-out ironing cabinet, which can be either a drawer or a pull-down. Remember to arrange for the power points and data points if you want to add a TV or radio to the laundry room where you do your ironing.

I find it odd that you hardly ever see an ironing board in laundry room photographs, let alone a cabinet big enough to house one. On laundry room design ideas, there is criticism of real-world laundry room images.

Other components

If you want to go all out with your laundry room design, you may add a drying cabinet or a mangle iron.

Step 2: Assess your available storage space 

Organizing and storing pre-washed clothing 

You must consider how you will manage the “laundry process” for lack of a better term for this phase. There might not be a requirement for storage space in the laundry room itself if you have a small household. If you have a large household, you probably need one or two hampers to keep and organise your items before washing them.

Washing and drying equipment

Simply make sure you have space in your cabinets, surfaces, or shelves for the equipment you will need to conduct your washing and drying, such as laundry baskets, detergent, dryer sheets, pre-wash treatments, etc.

A location for drying

How much area do you need for drying, and where will it be located?

Examining how you now dry your laundry is the best approach to determine how much drying space you require. Determine how many feet or meters you are occupying.

Now keep in mind that there are various drying choices that you could take into account while planning your laundry, including:

  • almost everything is tumble-dried.
  • washing outside to dry.
  • making or purchasing a drying cabinet (link).
  • changing the way you dry things by utilising different tools, such as a little peg rack, a wardrobe bar with hangers, a shiela maid hanging from the ceiling, or a drying space that hangs from doors or walls.
  • You might have additional drying equipment, such as nets, that makes it simpler to dry items flat.
  • Consider installing an extraction fan in order to provide adequate ventilation in the drying area. There is evidence that drying laundry inside your home without enough ventilation could be harmful to your health.

A location for unwashed laundry 

Therefore, there needs to be a location where everything can be stored properly after all that work when everything smells wonderful. This is particularly crucial if you have pets or your laundry doubles as a mudroom. Nothing is worse than seeing muddy paw prints on freshly laundered clothing!

Maybe when you finish doing the clothes, you immediately put it away where it belongs. Before I get around to giving it to everyone to put away, it usually sits around in the laundry room at my house for a few days.

Third-step: Counterspace 

For folding and sorting, you’ll need some counter space, and most of the time, laundry supplies like baskets and detergents end up there as well. As much counter space as you can fit in. According to kitchen cabinet proportions, it would probably have a depth of 24 inches, but if you’re low on room, you could get away with a depth of 12 inches.

While laundry design and planning if you encounter a lack of space in the laundry room, the kitchen or dining table also works well as a folding area.