VISITOR COUNT

The House With The Vintage Kitchen

In 2010, Nathan Chandler bought a house that was a 1956 model home. Except for the new roof, windows and the upgraded vinyl siding and windows, the house remained as it was in 1956.


It has never been occupied.



<img src="Rancher.png" alt="built in 1956">
Rancher-style home built in 1956



The brand new kitchen was state of the art for that time period. Today, some house hunters might call it "vintage."


<img src="Vintage 1950sr.png" alt="model home">
Vintage 1950s kitchen in pink








<img src="Vintage 1950s.png" alt="rare triple door fridge">
Triple door wall refrigerator







<img src="Inside.png" alt="triple door refrigerator">
Inside triple door refrigerator







<img src="Vintage 1950s dishwasher.png" alt="top loader">
Inside vintage dishwasher







<img src="Vintage 1950s.png" alt="cabinetry matching dishwasher">
Dishwasher is pulled out to fill from top








<img src="Vintage 1950s dishwasher.png" alt="modern controls">
Dishwasher controls








<img src="Vintage 1950s dishwasher.png" alt="three views">
Three views of the dishwasher

Nathan Chandler has a furniture business. As hard as it may be for vintage lovers to hear, Nathan Chandler chose to rip out the kitchen, install all new appliances, cabinets, and countertops , then he put the fixtures up for sale.

We thought this kitchen was cool and we wondered what our readers would do.


Poll Question:
If you bought a house that had never been lived in and if it had a vintage kitchen with appliances that had never been used, would you rip everything out to install new up-to-date appliances or would you leave the vintage kitchen as it is?
Thank you for your visit.



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