I've built the Elenco XP-720K kit, and can recommend it, with some minor reservations. Google will reveal a lot of information about it. You can find an assembly manual on-line. By the way, the assembly manual is very detailed and educational. I recommend downloading it and reading it first, even if you're only half-considering buying the kit.
It's a standard very simple design. It has a 5 volt 3 amp rail powered by a LM7805 plus a pass transistor. There are dual variable rails, positive and negative, powered by LM317 and LM337 regulators. They each supply up to an amp at anywhere between 1.25 and 15V. The physical aspects are very sturdy. It has a strong metal case with large heatsink for the regulators. It's pretty heavy, mostly due to the transformer. There is plenty of extra space in the case to add minor modifications, and a web search will reveal a few ideas that people have implemented. I built mine using nice 10-turn pots instead of the standard pots that came with the kit.
It has no adjustable current limiting, and no meters whatsoever.
I really think an electronics bench ought to have at least one power supply with adjustable current limits and meters on both voltage and current. That's my biggest reservation about this supply. Also, the variable rails are limited to about 1 amp each, which isn't a whole lot of current. The supply does not make use of multiple taps on the transformer, so it will get hot if you try to draw a lot of current at a low voltage. Speaking of which, there may be times when you want to go lower than the 1.25V low limit of this supply, for example, to simulate a single rechargeable AA cell as it's being discharged.
Since you mentioned power supply kits, this is one of the few supplies available as a complete kit, including the enclosure.
Instead of this kit, I think most people will be well served buying a pre-built linear supply with adjustable current and voltage limits, and digital meters on both voltage and current. There are a number of these available from various sources. I already had a standard DC supply with meters and adjustable current limit before I built the XP-720. I built this kit because I wanted something with dual rails for op-amp tinkering. I'm very happy with it for the price. It's inexpensive, and delivers what it promises, but that's not a whole lot.