Kitchen with Copper Worktops and Stainless Steel Worktops Ideas and Designs
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Andrew Cox
The clients of this kitchen were well prepared by having put together a picture board which proved useful in designing a kitchen that fitted in with their tastes in design and finishes.
The stainless steel benches were perfect for a busy cook, and the easy to clean surfaces worked well with food preparation. Though the principal colour was white, this was set off with the colours used for the floor to ceiling cabinetry as well the warm timber colours.
Hermitage Kitchen Gallery LLC
Designed by Melissa M. Sutherland, CKD, Allied ASID, Photo by Bill LaFevor
Vibra Stainless Steel Countertop and Backsplash with Integral Stainless Steel Sink by FourSeasons MetalWorks.
Kitchen Design and Cabinets by Hermitage Kitchen Design Gallery in Nashville, TN
Featured in online article at: http://www.homeportfolio.com/kitchen/kitchens-with-open-cabinets-and-shelving/
CCS ARCHITECTURE
Kitchen and Bathroom Cabinets: Rift cut white oak
Kitchen appliances: Miele, Wolf, Bosch & custom designed hood by CCS
Kitchen countertops: concrete by Bohemian Stoneworks and Stainless Steel
Photographer: Paul Dyer
Cameo Kitchens, Inc.
Kitchen Designer: Michael Macklin
Project completed in conjunction with Royce Jarrendt of The Lexington Group, who designed and built the custom home.
Project Features: Double-Tiered Cabinets with Glass Doors and Stainless Steel Library Ladder; Hammered Stainless Steel Countertops with Rivets; Custom Hammered Steel Hood; Two Cabinet Colors; Custom Distressed Finish;
Kitchen Perimeter Cabinets: Honey Brook Custom in Maple Wood with Dove White Paint; Nantucket Plain Inset Door Style with Flat Drawer Heads
Island Cabinets: Honey Brook Custom in Maple Wood with Custom Ebony Stain and Distressing # CS-3329-F; Nantucket Plain Inset Door Style with Flat Drawer Heads
Kitchen Perimeter Countertops: Soapstone
Island Countertops: Hammered Steel with Rivets
Floors: Clear Sealed White Oak; Installed by Floors by Dennis
Lighting Consultant: Erin Schwartz of Dominion Lighting
Photographs by Kelly Keul Duer and Virginia Vipperman
Walker Architects
A kitchen that encourages extended gatherings. An integrated oak table is a pleasant place for casual meals, homework, or overflow food prep - and is never more than an arm's reach away from a cup of coffee or bottle of wine.
© John Horner Photography
Thomas Roszak Architecture, LLC
Photography-Hedrich Blessing
Glass House:
The design objective was to build a house for my wife and three kids, looking forward in terms of how people live today. To experiment with transparency and reflectivity, removing borders and edges from outside to inside the house, and to really depict “flowing and endless space”. To construct a house that is smart and efficient in terms of construction and energy, both in terms of the building and the user. To tell a story of how the house is built in terms of the constructability, structure and enclosure, with the nod to Japanese wood construction in the method in which the concrete beams support the steel beams; and in terms of how the entire house is enveloped in glass as if it was poured over the bones to make it skin tight. To engineer the house to be a smart house that not only looks modern, but acts modern; every aspect of user control is simplified to a digital touch button, whether lights, shades/blinds, HVAC, communication/audio/video, or security. To develop a planning module based on a 16 foot square room size and a 8 foot wide connector called an interstitial space for hallways, bathrooms, stairs and mechanical, which keeps the rooms pure and uncluttered. The base of the interstitial spaces also become skylights for the basement gallery.
This house is all about flexibility; the family room, was a nursery when the kids were infants, is a craft and media room now, and will be a family room when the time is right. Our rooms are all based on a 16’x16’ (4.8mx4.8m) module, so a bedroom, a kitchen, and a dining room are the same size and functions can easily change; only the furniture and the attitude needs to change.
The house is 5,500 SF (550 SM)of livable space, plus garage and basement gallery for a total of 8200 SF (820 SM). The mathematical grid of the house in the x, y and z axis also extends into the layout of the trees and hardscapes, all centered on a suburban one-acre lot.
Kitchen with Copper Worktops and Stainless Steel Worktops Ideas and Designs
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