Kitchen Redesign Increases Function and Storage
Kitchen Redesign Increases Function and Storage
By Barbara Capella Loehr
Indeed, after the "big 3-0," a change is certainly in order, as in the case of this kitchen redesign.
Enter Joan Eisenberg, CMKBD, of JME Consulting, Inc. in Baltimore, MD, who saw the great functional and storage potential in the dated 15'x22' kitchen. The room also had a 4'6"x12'6" butler's pantry and walk-in pantry carved into one corner. All it needed was some reconfiguring.
"The owners of this kitchen are empty-nesters, and they were moving from a fairly large home into a community of zero-lot line houses that are 30-years old. And they wanted to update the kitchen, and the whole house, which had never been updated at all," she explains.
As a result, the old kitchen needed a more functional layout to accommodate heavy cooking. Plus, the owners requested more storage.
"When the lady of the house cooks, she cooks a lot," notes Eisenberg. But, she says, the couple is there only six months of the year. "So they wanted to do it all nicely, but within a budget," she adds.
To give this kitchen a more functional layout and meet the owners' expectations and requests, Eisenberg enlisted the the help of several others who were key to the design process. She collaborated with interior designer Jay Jenkins of Alexander Baer Associates in Baltimore, MD, as well as general contractor Rick Whitney of Rick of Westwood in Manchester, MD.
Once everyone was on board, Eisenberg began her redesign.
OBSTACLES OVERCOME
However, it was not all
smooth sailing, as Eisenberg had several obstacles to overcome in
this kitchen.
The first obstacle was two-fold the butler's and walk-in pantries, which both butted into the room 6'. Eisenberg took out both of them, since none of the walls along that stretch were bearing walls.
"We had to relocate some duct work to make it work," she notes.
Removing the butler's and walk-in pantries solved two problems. "It opened it up [the space]. And since the only window in the kitchen is a glass door at one end, which is on the same wall as where the butler's pantry was, the light was originally blocked off by the butler's pantry, and so was the view of the patio. Without the pantry, the light came through and the view opened up nicely," says Eisenberg.
Her next challenge was to figure out how to turn the layout around so that the lady of the house could see the outdoors and see her family and friends while she was cooking.
"To get her facing her family, we turned the sink, which was originally facing a wall, around onto her island by [slightly] channeling into the concrete slab [on which the house sits] to allow us to leave the plumbing vent where it was," she says. A KitchenAid dishwasher was also installed in the island.
In terms of aesthetics, Eisenberg collaborated closely with Jenkins, using his vision of soft, but not fussy styling to frame the functional layout she was giving the kitchen.
To that end, she says, "we used a flat-panel door with a beaded edge from Paris Kitchens on all of the custom cabinetry. Two different colors, a beige paint and a dark green stain, were applied to accent the room. The island, cooktop and eating area were all done in the green, and the surrounding cabinets on two other sides of the walls and part of the cooking area after the cooktop were all in the beige."
Custom details such as fluted columns along with pull-out shelves and a host of interior storage options complete the cabinetry's function.
To replace the storage lost by removing the pantries, Eisenberg used two 24" D pantries with roll-out trays that flank the new desk area, as well as 12" and 15" D cabinets "to the counter." These surround the 72" cooktop work area, which features a 30" Frigidaire gas cooktop and Broan ventilation with a 72" custom hood from Paris Kitchens.
"I also used cabinets to the counter where two unfitted 'furniture' pieces were created to flank a banquette designed by Jenkins," she explains.
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