I bought a frameless lazy susan and what I wanted to create was a L shaped peninsula, however there was no wall on either side, so I had to frame it out to support it and also create a way to support the granite.
Typical way to fasten peninsula or island cabinets is to fit some 2x4 screwed to floor underneath and screw the cabinets in bottom 4 inches into the 2x4. Rock solid....I myself never installed a frameless lazy Susan until now. I'm doing the same type of stud out for our peninsula you did.
Hi thanks for the video my husband is working on framing ours and this helped a lot. Just wondering how did you align the corner wall perfectly will the Corner of the cabinet we are having some trouble with this considering it has to be perfect for the countertop to fit just right
Great solution. I have a Lazy Susan that will but-up against the stove. I can support the corner walls and attach the lazy Susan to them like you did, but I’m concerned that the stove will jar the lazy Susan from time to time. Due to space limitation, I can’t add a spacer between the stove and lazy Susan that would hide a 2x4 frame; no space. I could only add a 1/2” plywood between stove and lazy Susan; I’d attach it to the lazy Susan vertical front, and stabilize to floor and wall to stabilize the rear. I am thinking the 1/2” plywood will support the the countertop. Do you see any flaws in this plan? Input is welcome. Thanks.
I didn't have to do anything, the floor was level all the way across, so the height was no issue, but if you're experiencing issues I would recommend shimming the bottom of the lazy Susan or the cabinets to make sure the top of your cabinets are 100% level so when the granite or other material goes on there won't be any issues