The plumbing for this kitchen island was run 6" short of where the cabinet is supposed to go, so now its in the cabinet next to it. What are my options besides moving the island over or demo'ing the concrete slab? There's 4.5" of toekick space underneath the cabinets, is this enough to elbow the waste pipe over into the right cabinet?
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1It may make the drain plug more often but a couple extra fittings and you are back to your original plan. – Ed Beal Aug 14 '20 at 05:41
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1If you have the room use sweep 90's or 45 degree elbows for the least restriction. – d.george Aug 14 '20 at 10:13
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2Have you considered changing your cabinetry plan? – Daniel Griscom Aug 14 '20 at 11:00
2 Answers
You'll simply need to bring the drain pipe and supply through the cabinet wall as you would any other wall. Set your cabinet, then cut appropriately-sized holes using a hole saw. Cut from both sides to prevent blowout of the panel's surface. Plan carefully to avoid extra holes, connection problems, and interference with any drawers above.
I would probably use a pair of 45° elbows to bring the drain forward (toward the photographer) from a low point, then 90° through the panel for a trap connection 12-14" off the floor, roughly centered in the depth of the cabinet. Do something similar with the supply.
If you're going to use an air-admittance valve as a vent, that might go well directly above the current pipe location. In that case you'd use a wye instead of the lower 45.
Obviously this disrupts your cabinet storage space, but with a little clever shelving modification you'll have a decent volume.
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2.5" pipe is 2.875" OD and I think you'll have a hard time fitting a bend for that inside your toekick. Perhaps if you chew out a little concrete right around the pipe so the sweep starts somewhat below floor level
I'm also a bit concerned about the evident lack of a vent pipe, since you describe this as an island and there should be a vent pipe in the floor if that is the case. I suppose you might be one of those folks that will learn why an air admittance valve as a substitute for a vent is not something I'm a fan of (they fail, then the sink stinks.)
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