29 September 2007

What's Cooking in Kitchen Design?

From a kitchen design article in the Alabama Press-Register there is some discussion of what the latest trends are in luxury kitchen design- of note, what some designers were seeing at the Parade of Homes tour: "Custom builder Mark Swanson and his wife, Jennifer, tour parade homes in other cities to get new ideas, he said. One feature people in higher-priced homes want are quartz countertops instead of granite, he said.

Swanson built a 4,300-square-foot house in Newcastle for the Parade of Homes, including many of the latest kitchen trends: Cambria quartz countertops; a 36-inch wide cooktop and oven, plus a separate, second oven; a pot-filler over the stove; a copper, vented hood; stainless steel appliances; built-in desk; and slide-out drawers in the cabinets.

Other kitchen items such as wine or beverage coolers, warming drawers, two dishwashers and islands with a sink continue to be popular, according to builders. Commercial ranges and Sub-Zero refrigerators are also must-haves for many of his clients

Still, Swanson said he can't build everything into a kitchen. He recalled once putting $25,000 worth of appliances in a client's kitchen that never gets used -- the owners don't cook."

RELATED POSTS:
2007 Kitchen Design Trends
Small Kitchen Remodeling Ideas
The "Jumbled Kitchen" Trend

If you do like to cook and would like new appliances installed in your new kitchen, you can find a quality kitchen design company in your neighborhood with ConstructionDeal.com. It's a free service for all homeowners and it saves you time.

22 September 2007

Kitchen Remodeling Ideas: The "Jumbled Kitchen" Trend

From the Wall Street Journal Online: "After years of focusing on marble countertops and stainless steel, designers and manufacturers are pressing a new look: the jumbled kitchen.

An estimated six million Americans will renovate their kitchens this year, according to the National Kitchen & Bath Association. To try to win some of that business, the industry is toying with new designs, from ultra-minimalist 'hidden' kitchens to colorful themes. But another strategy that's getting more attention lately combines multiple materials, styles and dimensions -- like three kinds of countertop stone, or cabinets in glass, metal and wood.

A similar aesthetic emerged in other parts of the house 20 years ago, when homeowners traded bedroom and living-room sets for stand-alone pieces. Now, many companies are promoting the idea for the kitchen. The Los Angeles showroom for minimalist design company Boffi just installed an L-shaped island in oak and stainless steel, with Corian cabinets and melamine drawers. German kitchen manufacturer SieMatic recently introduced a new collection of wood cabinetry, designed by Chicago-based Mick De Giulio, that is built to work with multiple thicknesses of countertops and varying accent materials like stainless steel and stone. Wm Ohs, a Denver cabinetry company with 28 showrooms nationwide, added stainless-steel and glass-accent doors for the first time in April -- a departure from its traditional all-wood look.

Nickel and Limestone

When Lori Naccarato's designer proposed the idea, she wasn't convinced. 'I'm the kind of person who needs everything to match,' she says. But after seeing all of the components in a showroom, she agreed. Her new $150,000 kitchen has five different materials incorporated into the counters -- including French limestone near the oven, a handmade nickel sheet in the pantry and red granite on the island -- two sinks made out of stone and stainless steel, and a Turkish travertine floor in two patterns, herringbone and puzzle. Ms. Naccarato, a 34-year-old homemaker in Hinsdale, Ill., calls it 'more homey' than the all-white kitchen in her old house.

'At one point, everything had to be perfectly matched,' says Ed Pell, market-research manager for the National Kitchen & Bath Association in Hackettstown, N.J. 'Now people want diversity. They like to see things broken up.'

The campaign is making some headway. Two years ago, Wilsonart in Temple, Texas, launched a marketing campaign stating that 'mixing materials is the new black.' Annual sales of its collection of colorful mix-and-match laminates, which are used in counters and backsplashes and promoted for their compatibility with other materials, were up 30% last year, compared to 3% for the company's laminates overall. At DuPont, the Wilmington, Del., maker of countertop materials like Corian and Zodiaq, 10% of customers are combining two different surfaces in the kitchen, up from practically zero seven years ago.

'People are still asking for stainless, but they're asking for less of it,' says Robert Schwartz, owner of design firm St. Charles of New York. The company has specialized in stainless-steel kitchens, but one recent display, built for last month's Kips Bay Decorator Show House in New York, included a red porcelain island, brass ceiling, white compressed-glass countertops, crystal hardware, mosaic floor and cabinets in walnut and stainless steel.

Designers have experimented with mixing over the past decade for mostly functional reasons, by inlaying a cutting board directly into the counter or adding a few glass cabinet doors that would let homeowners show off their plates. They're building on the idea as kitchens become more of a place for entertaining and living -- and as they look for ways to differentiate their products from off-the-shelf kitchens sold at companies like Ikea.

Some homeowners may find that the melting-pot approach doesn't come with easy accessories, as Carol Flier did after a $140,000 renovation last August. In the month before Thanksgiving, the dance teacher in Newton, Mass., scoured a dozen shops within 20 miles, hunting for dishes that would match the three types of stone in four colors. She finally went with French country-style serving pieces. But Ms. Flier has no regrets about leaving behind her old kitchen, in white and stainless steel. 'That, apparently, is out,' she says."

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