A Fun IKEA Hack Outdoor Play Kitchen

Our two little girls love playing outside in the sandbox and on our terrace, so this year I decided to build them an outdoor mud kitchen. I wanted a play kitchen that I can leave outside all year long and that’s perfect for playing with sand, water, flowers, and leaves.

It’s possible to build beautiful play kitchens using pallets or leftover wood, but this time I wanted to keep it super simple. With two eager girls waiting, I simply chose to use wooden crates from IKEA. I already had two crates in the basement that I had been using for storage, but I needed four so lucky for me, we live just a short drive from our local IKEA store! 30 minutes and 2 ice creams later, we had everything we needed to get started.

The outdoor play kitchen is made up of four wooden IKEA crates screwed together, with one end of the “countertop” replaced by a plastic box that serves as a sink. The sink has a reversible lid that resembles a grill and a stove (made with vinyl stickers). Plus, there’s a real water “faucet” on a shelf and small hooks to hang utensils.

The girls absolutely love their outdoor play kitchen and have already spent countless hours making us flower dishes, mud pies, and sand cakes!

Girls playing outside with IKEA hack play kitchen

Materials and Equipment for The Outdoor Play Kitchen

Building a play kitchen with an IKEA hack this way requires some materials and tools:

Materials

*NOTE: IKEA has changed the design of these crates since this guide was created. In some countries, these new crates have replaced the old ones. The new crates require further customization to be used for a play kitchen like this. 

Tools

Toddler playing with DIY outdoor play kitchen

Outdoor Play Kitchen in Less Than 1 hour

The best part about this IKEA hack outdoor play kitchen is that the frame takes less than an hour to assemble! However, you will need a bit more time if you also want to create a shelf for the water dispenser and make grill and stove stickers.

How to Assemble the Outdoor Play Kitchen

  1. Screw all four sides together on two of the IKEA KNAGGLIG crates, leaving out the bottom.
  2. Turn the crates upside down and place them side by side where the play kitchen will go. Lay the bottoms on top of each crate.
  3. Screw three sides together on the remaining two crates (two short sides and one long side), again leaving out the bottoms.
  4. Place these crates on top of the first two. Place a bottom on top of one of the top crates and place the IKEA TROFAST crate on the other as the sink.

Guide to outdoor play kitchen

  1. Carefully break off the top two boards of the last bottom with a flat screwdriver. Cut off the remaining pieces for the backrest.
  2. Screw the pieces you just cut off to the back of the kitchen, just below where the back panel will sit.
  3. Secure the back panels to the back of the kitchen using flat brackets. Optionally, you can also add a bracket across the back panels to hold them together.

NOTE: If you want to cut a hole for the faucet, do this before attaching the back panels.

Back side of outdoor play kitchen

A Faucet With Real Water

Having access to real water in a play kitchen is a fantastic feature, so I decided to add a faucet to the girls’ mud kitchen. Last year I bought a cheap water dispenser that the girls have been using to play with outside, and it fit the new outdoor play kitchen perfectly. I built a small shelf using two pieces of wood I had lying around and some leftovers from the IKEA crate. I cut a hole in the back panel so the faucet could peek out over the sink.

How to Build a Shelf for the Water Dispenser

  1. Cut a hole in the bottom board of the back panel before securing it to the kitchen, so the faucet can reach the sink.
  2. Take one of the boards you removed from the IKEA KNAGGLIG crate’s bottom. Cut it to length so it can be screwed to the back of the kitchen just below the back panel at the sink. Use short screws so they don’t poke through the front.
  3. Cut the battens to the right height and attach them to the board with angle brackets.
  4. Cut the remaining bottom board to length so it can serve as a shelf. Let it rest on the board you secured to the back of the kitchen and screw it to the battens from above.

Adding shelfAdding shelf

Water dispenser for outdoor play kitchen

Mud kitchen with running water

Hooks for Utensils

The girls have a collection of utensils they use in the sandbox, and they need a place to hang them in their new play kitchen. I bought some right angle screws from a hardware store and screwed them into the back panel by hand so the utensils can hang there.

Hooks for utensils, outdoor play kitchenKid playing in outdoor mud kitchen

Grill and Stove Top Stickers

You can buy a lid for the IKEA TROFAST crate used as a sink, and I decided to use this lid as a removable and reversible grill and stove top.

I have a Cricut Maker cutting machine that can cut vinyl, so I designed a grill and stove on my laptop and cut it using my machine. I used black and silver permanent vinyl that can withstand sun, rain, and mud.

If you don’t have a cutting machine, you can draw with a marker or paint with durable paint instead. Alternatively, you can cut the design in vinyl by hand using a utility knife.

Toy grill outdoorToy stove outdoor play

BBQ grill outdoor play kitchen

How do you like our new outdoor play kitchen? Let me know in the comments below!

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