Apparently, the workers installed the countertop on top of the sink when the owner was not at home, and the wife signed the documents accepting the work.
The dude had to cut holes with improvised tools.
Counters are installed whole like that sometimes. I can imagine that maybe the contractor's router broke or was lost or stolen and they had to come back the next day with the router to cut the proper hole but in the meantime he just rough cut a couple holes with the buzz saw so that the homeowners can use their sink.
Is that common in newer homes? Is it a regional thing? I've only ever seen garbage disposals installed in the regular sink drain, I've never seen one that had it's own dedicated little sink like that!
Ah yes the ol I have limited space so I will divide it in half. Do you by chance operate my company's budget? No money for raises but if we split it between hiring, decommissioning, and training we can make money from nothing.
Emergency back up sink when you fill other one up with dirty crap. Designed to make you panic and hopefully do something about the real sink.
I've always hated double sink designs. They just use a bunch of extra space that could have been more sink.
No, it's an insinkerater - it's got a mechanical spinning/bludgeoning device (sorry for the crude imagery!) that reduces leftovers and carrot stubs and the like to a fine meal so it can go down the drain.
I think it's better than in the rubbish, was the thinking? Still not as good as compost, admittedly
I'm more fascinated by the countertop. Although thin and probably composite rather than natural stone, it's still stone and that can get really expensive. It might honestly get more expensive to do this and fix it later than just do it right from the getgo.
Looks like corian, so plastic. So long as those cuts don't extend past the basin, it can be fixed with a router and a couple bits. If they do extend past the basin, probably bottom right, then you could fix it with resin and make it pass anything but a close inspection with some skill.
It might be the type of basin that drops in from the top, which would be easier to fix and would be more likely to hide the bad cuts under the flange.
Repairs on marbled Corian can be pretty hard to match cleanly, so hopefully it isn't that. Whenever I've installed these we always cut the sinks out at the factory, but I guess you could use a router onsite 🤷
They why bit is, in my opinion, because the sink is meant to be dropped into the hole in the counter top to help keep moisture away from the underside.
It looks like acrylic, either some cowboys got a hold of some cheaper stuff and are wacking it in, or a tradie sent this pic back to his boss to give them a heart attack (the stuff is expensive af)