What we have here is a very serviceable, sturdy, relatively inexpensive piece of furniture that for me solves a clutter problem. It's the same height as the existing vanity counter, fits in the space behind the door, and I can put all the junk (hair cutter, razor, bandages, antibiotic, these are not related I swear, flashlight for some reason, air freshener, etc) from the counter in the drawers and cabinet plus some other stuff that needs a home, and I can use the top for overflow cos it's the same height as the vanity.Recommended over the other versions, and I looked at a LOT of versions before deciding to get this one.Instructions say it should take about an hour to put together. Assembly took me about 2.5 hours after work, including sorting parts to confirm everything's there and checking for damage. Not counting the dinner break in the middle. The sorting and the break prob slowed me down, but also, I prefer to take my time.There's a number of very similar designs of this cabinet around on Amazon and elsewhere; based on reviews of those and my direct experience, this one has these advantages:* two shelves -- although, what's not clear in the listing is that only the upper shelf is adjustable; the lower one is fixed.* drawer stops. they're thin plastic plugs and may not hold up to violent yanking, but better than nothing ...* the back is slotted into the panels, not attached solely with screws* both sides of every part is painted -- no ugly brown if you put a drawer bottom in upside down!* I like that there's a trim piece at the bottom front, less likely for small things to roll under.Issues:* the back panels are supposed to be screwed to a support bar at the top. These are the only screws without corresponding pre-started holes on the part to be attached to, and I had trouble getting them started. If I'd looked ahead I'd have tapped a starter hole in.* some parts have dowels to guide parts together. these could have been longer, or maybe the holes a little smaller so they'd fit more snugly. I cracked the center wall panel (not enough to cause real damage, but it's only MDF) because I wasn't paying close enough attention to the alignment, cos most of the dowel was sunk into the part next to it.* the "anti-tip wall attachment", or whatever it's being called here, amounts to two angle brackets and a zip-tie. I wouldn't trust it.* some screws on the drawers feel like they stripped. the parts are holding together for me; if concerned, maybe add glue or thread locker.