DiY In-Wall First Aid Cabinet

Walls: the Final Frontier
I work with my hands. Any given day may find them thrust into dirt, wrapped around a wrench, grasping boulders or feeding wood into machines with sharp, fast-moving parts. Hands slip. Skin flies. Since I’ve started on this road of DiY self-sufficiency, I’ve become well-acquainted with the first aid drawer – the second drawer of Big Red.
It held everything I needed for my near-daily ministrations to my flayed and battered hands – Band Aids, Neosporin, rubbing alcohol, hydrogen peroxide, tweezers – if I could find them. Band Aids were easy – they were always on top. The alcohol and H2O2 were also easy – they reside in large bottles. But the tweezers and the Neosporin – they could have been anywhere, hiding down in the cracks, laughing as blood dripped from my palm, snickering at the splinter sticking out from my fingertip. And then there was Handan.


Any time Handan needed to find something in that deep drawer of discontent, a lozenge or an antacid pill or some cortisone cream, she would fume that it was not there. I would come over and find her sought-after pill, ointment or tincture, but I couldn’t leave without an earful about the state of the drawer.


“Why can’t I find anything in here? I had this drawer perfectly organized!”


“I know, but…” But I use the damn drawer every day, so of course it’s going to get messy!


“You need to put things back in their proper place after you use it!”


“Okay, my Babes. I’ll keep it neat and organized from now on.” Ha! Fat chance!


The last straw fell onto the camel’s back not long ago when I ran out of large Band-Aids. I still had hundreds of those useless little ones – you know the ones that are so small, they can’t even wrap around a finger – but I needed bigger. On my next trip to the supermarket, I stocked up. I felt like I hadn’t bought bandages in decades. Who knows, maybe I hadn’t. Maybe the box I’d been using was a gift. Anyway, I went a little wild and bought one of almost every type. Heavy duty fabric ones? Check. Ugly-but-functional plastic ones? Check. Invisible-but-weak shear ones? Check. And I got all sizes, too. I could patch up anyone, from the Jolly Green Giant to Tinkerbell. The problem was that all these glorious new boxes of sterile bandages would no longer fit in the first-aid drawer. I needed a first aid cabinet. But where to put it? My kitchen has no wall space. None. The only patch of wall is in the narrow transition from the mud room/laundry room to the kitchen. There, you see? Next to Big Red and above the dog bowls. But that space is so cramped. I blanched at the thought of something sticking out of the wall. Big Red was bad enough, but at least she held lots and lots of stuff.
(Why yes, I AM aware that my microwave is greasy, thank you! Oh, and yes, I AM aware that it is covered in unsightly cleaning products. Why do you ask?)


Well, if I couldn’t go outward, perhaps I could go inward? I grabbed a tape measure so I could visualize. Yes. Sixteen inches between the stud center points – that gives me about 14 1/2 inches of width. Subtract another inch for the 1/2 inch plywood I would be using for the sides. Okay, so far so good…let’s look at the length. I eyeballed the tape and came upon a number. Looks good! I grabbed my stud finder and went looking for studs.
I found the studs right where I was expecting to find them. But I found something else as well. Let’s call it The Anomaly. In construction, studs are always set 16 inches apart. This makes it easy to remove pieces of drywall or screw heavy things into the studs. If you can find one, you can find them all. So my two sides were well established, but I kept getting an odd reading on the stud finder in-between the two studs. Back and forth I went, always the same anomalous reading. I decided to probe for The Anomaly with a small drill bit. I went across the top line I had drawn on the wall, drilling in every so often to see if I hit resistance.
Nothing! No resistance. Figuring my finder was more dud than stud, I whipped out my multi-tool and started hacking apart my wall. What could possibly go wrong? I had probed!
I cut out my pre-marked rectangle and pulled out a big slab of drywall. Success!


Wait, what!?! Holy crap! What the hell is that thing?!?!
My mind popped and sputtered as it tried to make sense of this thing. I had probed, dammit!


But what was it for? Couldn’t be a poop pipe – it wasn’t below a toilet. Couldn’t be an air duct – it was way too small. And what was with that dinky brown wire? I decided to go down to the basement to see if I could find the pipe’s terminus. Yup, there it was. And this pipe connected to….nothing. Ditto the wire.
Who the hell builds a house with phantom pipes and ghost wires? Hmmmmm…


I went up two floors to look for the other end, and there it was, just outside my son's door at foot level.
I forgot that this house was plumbed for central vacuuming, but the original owners never had the vacuum unit installed. Excellent. I went back downstairs and cut through the pipe and the wire, as I have no desire for central vacuuming.


Next I donned the appropriate PPE (personal protective equipment) to handle fiberglass insulation…
…then pulled out the pink stuff.
So I was back on track and ready to build. I went downstairs to my sawdust warehouse and got to work on the cabinet.


I created a highly detailed and precise blueprint for my work.
I built the cabinet and shelves out of a mix of 1/2 inch and 1/4 inch plywood.
At this point, I brought it upstairs to see if it fit in the hole. It did. I left it there until Handan came home so she could see it and shower me with praise.


Handan walked in. “Are you sure it’s big enough? Did you fill it with all the things from the drawer?” she asked.


“It’s big enough.” I said.


“But did you check if everything fits?” she asked again.


“No, but it’s big enough!” I said.


She looked at me.


“Fine!” I said and started cramming all the crap from the drawer onto the shelves. I got about halfway through the drawer, then the shelves were full.


She looked at me.


“Dammit!” I said. “I’ll make it bigger!”


She looked at me. “It’s okay, my babes. I love you.” She turned and walked away.


I retreated to a corner to lick my wounded pride. The cabinet sat in another corner, untouched, for the next month.


Okay folks, I've hit my Hometalk picture limit already, so if you like what you've read so far, and you want to see how it all played out, please click on over to our blog to finish reading the post.
If you are interested in similar crafts & DiY projects, click here to see more crafts & DiY projects from The Navage Patch.


Thanks for reading!


-Greg
Handan & Greg @ The Navage Patch
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