Posts tagged "Hideaway Kitchen" | Show All

11 January 2010

Kitchen Craft

We are aiming to build a clean, welcoming kitchen that feels rustic and homely - a relaxed kitchen that is as much for living and entertaining as it is for cooking.  If not too stymied by cost, we aim to achieve this vision through the use of steel, lightly varnished wood and local limestone.

Similar to the b2 kitchen system from Bulthaup pictured below, we are treating our kitchen cabinets like furniture in order to create a space that feels more like a living or dining room than a kitchen.  We’ve decided to avoid placing cabinets above counter height and to fashion those we do have as modified credenzas. By lifting the cabinetry off the ground, we can also mitigate the numbers of rodents and cockroaches that nest in dark unreachable places.

Bulthaup's b2 kitchen system
System b2 from Bulthaup

Our fridge and pantry will be contained in a single wooden cabinet that we are designing to look a bit like a standalone armoire. We have the basic concept down and are now focused on massaging the details (who knew designing door handles was such a tedious task) and fine-tuning the overall look of our pantry unit.

Northwest perspective of our kitchen
Northwest perspective of our kitchen

As for sitting and socializing, a table and bench seat along one wall will give us a place to flesh out recipes and sip on a glass of wine without getting in the way of any dinner preparations.

Southeast perspective of our kitchen
Southeast perspective of our kitchen

There is still lots to do.  We’re not yet happy with the placeholder door handles we’ve inserted in the renders above, and have no idea where the compost bucket will go.  But all-in-all, we’re on the right track and can now put this aside for a bit while we tackle the bedrooms.

7 January 2010

Scouring the Pantry for Ideas

The new year brings thoughts of our kitchen. With a high-sloped ceiling and original french terracotta tile roof, our kitchen is a bit rustic and charming. The question we are currently wrestling with is how to design a kitchen that fits the existing character of the room while blending well with the rest of the house.

The space for our new kitchen

First step - look for inspiration. One obvious idea is a hacienda-style kitchen typical of the grand houses built a few hundred years ago. Used predominantly by servants, in a time before running water and microwave ovens, these kitchens functioned very differently to the way we cook today.

An old hacienda kitchen

This, of course, should not hold us back. Couldn’t we adapt this style to our modern life? Certainly plenty of people have.

The kitchen at Los Dos cooking school
The kitchen at Los Dos cooking school in Mérida

For us, the problem with such kitchens is that they are re-creationist dreams. Dressed up with intricate Puebla tile (thanks Frida Kahlo), ornate extractor fans and polished copper pots dangling from the ceiling, these kitchens are dramatic set pieces. Dressed up to woo guests with high drama, they create the fantasy of a hacienda lifestyle. A lifestyle of what - a rich servant perhaps?

Granted, there are many examples of such kitchens that look great and work well. It is, however, not the right idea for our stripped down, relaxed minimalist design ethic. We spend a lot of time in our kitchen and need a functional space to whip up a nice meal while remaining relaxed enough to suit our hideaway aesthetic.

We also want a space that won’t drive us mad with ornateness. Maybe we should consider a modern gourmet kitchen with clean lines and plenty of counter space?

A kitchen designed by Boffi

This sleek gourmet kitchen screams modern minimalism and we love it. Although we’ve dreamed of hiring the designers at Boffi to bless our kitchen with their products (and pay an arm and a leg in the process), we know in the end this style of kitchen is simply wrong for our house. With its sleek lines and 21st-Century materials, this kitchen is anything but rustic. It would, in the end, sit uncomfortably in our house, scoffing at our old-world terracotta tiles.

Our kitchen is rustic and we need to respect that. At the same time, our house is modern and minimalist, so we need a kitchen that reflects that as well. So perhaps it’s time for some modern rustic inspiration?

A kitchen in Provence, Francy by Greet and Armand
A kitchen in Perigord Nord, France by Greet and Armand

This kitchen represents where we’re heading. It’s relaxed and clean with a whiff of rustic. The open shelving and lack of high cabinets give it a relaxed, livable feeling. The lightly varnished wood and stone floor evoke the idea of a slower time without being specific. The cabinetry feels like furniture, equally at home in a dining room and the kitchen. It is in such a space that we imagine ourselves comfortably passing the time of day.