Outdoor kitchen / BBQ cart build


 

Jules B

TVWBB Member
Hi all, I hope y’all had a good week! Mine was OK but sadly no BBQ action this week due to lack of time and less than ideal weather here inthe UK!

For the last week I have been quite busy in my spare times onmy next DIY project. We moved house recently and we finally have enough backyardspace so I could finally build what I have been wanting for the last 3 years… a mini outdoor kitchen! Let me explain.

In our last place we didn’t have a garden, merely a little 2.4 x 2.5m patio open to everything so I couldn’t really build and keep a lotof outdoor furniture out, in fact there was not enough place to have both our garden table and chairs and my 22.5 OTG at the same time which drove me crazy! Now our patio garden is probably 8-10x that size so I finally bit the bullet, bought some lumber and stated out my mini outdoor kitchen.

The reason why I am building this is that it drives me crazy at times not having any cart or work surface next to the grill when I am outside barbecuing (I’m sure a lot of you guys will relate to that!), I am also big on food safety and like to wash my pans, tongs and utensils straight away after been in contact with raw meat, up until now I have to shuffle back and forth from the grill outside to the kitchen on the other side of the house to do the washing-up driving my wife nuts dragging dirt and dust inside, so apart from having a worktop, my little kitchen cart needs to have a plumbed sink so I can do all the food prep and washing up outside. Enough rambling, more pictures.

I made the frame out of 2x3 with sub-frames put together by 2” pocket holes,glued and biscuit jointed for strength and good joint alignment, in other words these things aren’t going to come loose anytime soon:


I made the upright post by notching housing joints on all 3 levels on all corners to add strength to the joint and distribute the weight of the finished cart:


pic of the s
ub-frame stained, glued and screwed together:


Initially I wanted to make everything out of Western RedCedar, but the cost is crazy over here in the UK, so to same money I only made the top level slats out of red cedar and the rest of the slats was from wood I reclaimed from some aggregate pallets I get from my local industrial estate, pallet wood is really tough, weather resistant and most of it is quality hardwood (mostly Alder and Oak with a bit of Redwood too), once planed and cut to size, the wood is actually really beautiful:


Mock-up of the finish result, I ordered on Amazon a cheap stainless steel caravan sink (or camping trailer for you guys in the US) and a garden tap with wall bracket, sink came in with all the waste plumbing too, nowthe only things left to do is stain and varnish all the slats, give a second coat of stain/sealer to the frame, fit the sink, plumb it and add a few bells& whistles to it (magnetic knife rack, bottle opener, bbq utensils hooks …):



In term of design, I drew inspiration from a Popular Mechanic cart plan they have online as well as a cart Norm Abrams from New Yankee Workshop did a while ago, but it’s mostly my own plan and design. If anyone is interested I’m happy to share the dimensions and key measures.

Hope you guys like it and hopefully inspire a few of you to do something similar in the future!

Jules
 
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Very Nice!

In my mind, welders and woodworkers are the most talented on this Planet.

Thanks Jim :-) I wouldn't describe myself as a true woodworker yet, merely a DIY enthusiast learning carpentry , I started out building stuff 3 years ago and acquired quite a lot of tools and techniques, but for the last few month I'm trying to go back to basics and use as much hand tools as possible and try to avoid the easy options of power tools, just to hone the skills of doing things the old way and getting proficient cutting joints by hand (dovetails, mortice and tenons). On this build I've used 90% hand tools, the only 2 power tools used were a drill/driver and a biscuit jointer, all the sawing, planing and sanding were done by hand :-)
 
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Well, Jules, I can honestly say you are MORE talented with wood than I am.... I will not show off ANYTHING i have tried building. ;)
 
Very nice and great craftsmanship Jules. I've built a few carts but nothing that requires plumbing yet.:D Having a work surface is really a necessity I believe, it makes it much much easier to get the cook done.
 
Well, Jules, I can honestly say you are MORE talented with wood than I am.... I will not show off ANYTHING i have tried building. ;)

Im sure you're too modest Jim, actually I was wondering there doesn't seem to be a post on tvwbb about sharing each other bbq area and food prep setup, there is a well established thread about this on bbq brethren but not on here afaik, I might just launch one.

Jules
 
Thanks for the kind words Rich, I actually have quite a bit of cedar lumber left so I'm thinking I minght use it to do hinged a drop down counter top extension on the left of the cart with a cutout the same curve as my 22.5 kettle so I can have more work surface once setup. The counter height top once finished will be 950mm (around 38") so just above normal kitchen counter heigh, I don't want to bend when prepping food on this cart :-)

i will ill look at how much wood I've got left and see if I can include an extension drop leaf to the design :-)
 
Bump! I'm sorry it took me a while to go back to that thread but I've been quite busy the last few days, anyhow I have finished the cart last week and just took a couple of pics!
 
So, here it goes,

cart finished with running water and bucket for the grey water (super high tech I'm telling you!):


Family portrait along with the finished cart:


I made sure that the height of the little side table I have also built gives the 14.5 WSM or the Smokey Joe Mini the right grate height (around the same level as the work top of the cart).

Detail of the counter top and utensils/ knife rack:


Plastic boxes that fit the shelves perfectly for storing coal on the left and smoking wood chips / fire-lighting /cleaning items in the smaller box on the right:


Hope y'all enjoy, initially I thought I could do this in one weekend! No chance it's amazing how much I always underestimate the amount of work involved in the projects I do, all an all it took me more like 3 weekends (not working from dawn to dusk though) and it's still not 100% done, I have to finish staining the cedar top slats and install a beer bottle opener (critical part of the project! :p) to call it a day.

Jules
 
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