
I am trying to fashion some kind of breakfast bar for a kitchen/diner. There is no chance of me trying to find something to match the current kitchen (been down that road) so thought, as there are steel appliances and splashbacks, that I could try a stainless steel bench instead, like the kind you get in commercial kitchens. See attached photo.
I think it would work and actually look really great. It will act as a peninsular breakfast bar and additional worktop space in a small kitchen. creating an L-shape with the kitchen counter etc. Only thing is I need to secure it to the wall/kitchen worktop/floor some how.
The trouble is because it's steel I don't know how to do that (I'm not attempting it myself, I'd get someone in, but I at least want some concept of how it could be done, and find the right kind of person to do it).
Another problem to add to the mix is, I would like to install a steel splashback on the wall behind it, almost floor to ceiling, so I'd be wanting to attach the steel table to that. If that's the best way to do it of course. I don't have a problem securing the legs to the floor (an engineered wood floor). I would expect a proper kitchen breakfast bar to be fixed to the floor so why not this. Trouble is I wouldn't know what fixings to use, and the legs of this table are square, and have little feet.
The other alternative is to have just a steel countertop (see photo), MDF core, and fix that to the wall with a batten, simple enough. But then I present myself with another problem because I can't find any legs that fix to the floor to provide support (many seem to be freestanding and use tension to secure themselves to the floor), so there is the danger of them being kicked out etc. The countertop would be 1500mm x 600mm so would need a bit of support. I don't know how many legs that would need. Maybe something like in the attached photo that I could have a custom made height for (these are used to fix tables in restaurants, cafes and nightclubs etc)
I also know I don't have to have a long splashback, it can just go as far as the countertop if necessary, I'm just liking the idea of the floor to top-of-cabinet length to make a feature of it (see photo of proposed splashback, it's only 1mm thick), creating an extension of the kitchen without the breakfast bar making the whole room look odd (it's a kitchen/diner/lounge). I'm probably making things a bit hard for myself! It's the only thing I can think of to create a breakfast bar and more work surface.
I'm looking for any ideas or suggestions here. Basically I need to secure the steel table/countertop to stop tenants moving the table about/kicking out supporting legs when I'm eventually not living there.
Thanks so much!