the galley kitchen, redefined - Howells Architecture + Design
Transcription
the galley kitchen, redefined - Howells Architecture + Design
THE GALLEY KITCHEN, REDEFINED With their “shotgun” arrangement of space along two walls, galley kitchens are often narrow and can feel cut off from the rest of the house, but thoughtful design connects people and living spaces in the Beaumont-Wilshire kitchen of Rose and Eric Brooks. The Brookses had all the usual reasons motivating their decision to remodel the kitchen of their 1940s house. The existing kitchen was the product of multiple cheap renovations, with unattractive cabinet veneers and worn linoleum flooring. The space also functioned poorly. At the breakfast nook, a peninsula jutted out into the throughway, impeding the flow. Also, while double doors connected the breakfast nook to the rear garden, 10 August/September 2012 Northwest Renovation nwrenovation.com this area was particularly cramped. “There was always a bottleneck over there,” Eric recalls. As a homeschooler of three children, Rose was extra-invested in a well laid out kitchen that had a better connection to the dining room on one end and the back yard at the other. At first the owners thought they would need to knock out an existing wall and a stairwell to expand the kitchen, but their architect, Michael Howells, discouraged this, assuring them the available space was sufficient for an optimal kitchen. “The kitchen was already wide enough,” he says. “The basic layout wasn’t wrong. But in this case, slight tweaks to the configuration would transform the space.” While the essential layout remained the same (range, sink, and breakfast nook retained their placement), the kitchen remodel necessitated the removal of a chimney, the widening of the opening to better connect kitchen and dining room, the removal of nonfunctioning soffits to extend cabinetry to the ceiling, and the removal and replacement of the rear doors to the garden. The existing rear doors were just a few inches short of functional, Howells explains, “but inches really matter when you’re talking about a space that five people are using every day.” Replacing the back doors and shifting the new door set slightly to Continued on page 12 nwrenovation.com Northwest Renovation August/September 2012 11 Architect: Michael Howells of Howells Architecture + Design www.howellsarc.com; 503-869-3715 Contractor: Mike Andreyuk of ReCraft www.recrafthome.com; 503-680-0939 Cabinetmaker: Eric Wolf of Wolf & Son; 503-232-9168 Architectural photography: Matt Niebuhr www.mattniebuhr.com; Copyright 2011 — Matt Niebuhr; all rights reserved 12 August/September 2012 Northwest Renovation Continued from page 11 the right created space for a builtin bench at the breakfast nook and accommodated a generous dinerstyle table and chairs. The result is a cozy and capacious seating area that still allows for easy passage to the yard. With its church pew-like seating area, the breakfast nook is easily the most popular hangout in the house. “It’s a multi-purpose space now,” Rose says, with the table utilized as much for school projects as for eating, and the bench providing a quiet spot for the family’s avid young readers, Annika and Naomi. Aesthetically, the kitchen is sleek, but also warm, with an unusual combination of cherry cabinetry and built-ins, white countertops and blue tile. Howells’ materials palette started with the choice of wood. “I was inspired by a beautiful cherry cabinet in the owners’ living room,” he explains, “and by the rich colors of their collection of musical instruments.” White IceStone (recycled glass) countertops add lightness and brightness to the kitchen, “plus food always looks good on white,” Howells claims. A soft blue tile from Heath’s Modern Basics line completes the scheme, and oak-flooring matches the kitchen with the rest of the house. Overall, the kitchen has a clean, modern sensibility, but also feels rooted in this older house. Howells believes the key to a good remodel is sensitive — but not faithful — integration within the existing home. “You want to pay respect to the building’s origins, but you also want to be current. And then you want quality materials and craftsmen so it will last well into the future.” In Howells’ design approach, aesthetic choices aren’t simply a matter of personal preference but are important decisions that should be arrived at carefully. “Remodeling a kitchen well is expensive, and I take my clients’ investment very seriously. I always try to guide them toward something that not only looks good and functions well now, but will also do so for decades to come.” n nwrenovation.com