Our Kitchen Collection 2025
Designers love galley kitchens and homeowners usually don’t. The reason for the gap is that a well-designed galley is the most efficient kitchen you can build — the cook moves two paces to reach anything — and a badly designed galley is a corridor with fridges. These are the galley kitchen ideas that tilt it toward the first kind.
A galley needs 1,000–1,200 mm between the two runs. Less than 1,000 mm and two people can’t pass. More than 1,200 mm and you have to stretch across the gap to move a pan from prep to hob. 1,100 mm is the sweet spot for most UK kitchens.
If the room is wider than 1,400 mm between walls, the answer isn’t a galley — it’s an L-shape or a single run with a table opposite. Never design a galley just because the room is narrow; design it because the width is right.
The classic kitchen work triangle assumes three points. In a galley the triangle flattens because two of the points are on opposite walls. The rule is:
The biggest mistake in galley design is putting tall wall cabinets on both walls. It turns the room into a tunnel. Our preferred layout: tall units and full-height cabinets on one wall, open-back worktop with a splashback window or shelf run on the other. You double the usable storage on the cabinet wall and keep the room feeling open.
Galleys feel narrow, so the finish does most of the work:
Our Bowden gloss range and Deedale bright reflective matt are both built for kitchens that need to catch every bit of light.
Plank flooring or long-format tile run along the length of the galley — not across it — draws the eye down the room rather than across it. Small visual trick, big perceptual effect.
A single strip of downlighters down the centre of the ceiling is the wrong answer — it lights the floor, not the worktops. Under-cabinet task lighting on both runs is non-negotiable. If the ceiling can take them, position downlights over the worktop line, not the centre of the room.
In a narrow galley, every handle is another thing to catch hips on. Handleless (Pollino True Handleless) or recessed-rail fronts give you another 20 mm of walk space each side — useful when you only had 1,000 mm to start with.
If the galley runs toward a window, wall or garden at one end — especially through a doorway to another room — the eye reads the kitchen as a corridor to somewhere, which makes it feel more generous. Position tall units so they frame that end of the room rather than block the view to it.
See a galley at full scale: book a visit to the Chester showroom, Nantwich showroom or Warrington showroom showroom. Every quote includes free 3D visuals.
Whether you are looking for a modern look or something more traditional, at Deelux we tailor the kitchen to suit your needs and can find the style that's right for you. Check out some of the styles on our website and if you have any queries or want to talk to someone about your designs please get in touch.