The catering-friendly kitchen consists of two islands—one a ba…
The catering-friendly kitchen consists of two islands—one a bar and buffet, the other a cleaning and prep area—plus a large wall containing storage, refrigeration, and ovens.
William Lesch
Rather than being a support space to the side, the kitchen is ne…
Rather than being a support space to the side, the kitchen is nearly adjacent to the front entry and an important foreground piece.
William Lesch
The Douglas fir ceiling and Mexican stone flooring continues thr…
The Douglas fir ceiling and Mexican stone flooring continues throughout the house. Kitchen materials include wenge cabinetry, a back-painted glass backsplash, Caesarstone countertops, and an anodized aluminum bar.
Senhauser Architects
Kitchen plan.
Senhauser Architects
Kitchen island and elevations.
One problem with open, party-friendly kitchens is that the person cooking often has to fight his or her way through a crowd. This scheme resolves that issue with two islands, one a cleaning and prep surface that runs parallel to a wall of storage, refrigeration, and ovens. A perpendicular island—the bar and buffet—forms an edge to the work zone. “You can’t hide the caterers,” architect John Senhauser says. “This gives them an opportunity to be in the middle of things, but in a space that’s defensible.”
The super-functional space doesn’t necessarily look like a kitchen, thanks to materials and proportions that reinforce the house’s structural aesthetic—thick walls supporting planar roof elements—and desert color palette. Wenge cabinets anchor the storage wall, while white Caesarstone countertops, translucent glazing, and a cantilevered aluminum bar top offset the Mexican stone flooring and hammered stone on the walls and fireplace. The kitchen’s smart layout and materials caught the judges’ eye. “It’s clearly designed for entertaining and integrated really well,” one said.