Project Details
- Project Name
- 609 Kendrick Place-Kitchen Studio: Small Fry
- Location
-
TN ,United States
- Project Types
- Custom
- Project Scope
- Renovation/Remodel
- Shared by
- Editor
- Consultants
-
Rob Fuhrig,Guignard Mechanical Systems,Jeffrey Jacobs
- Project Status
- Built
- Room or Space
- Kitchen
Project Description
Kitchen
Kitchen Studio: Small Fry
K+B Studio
This pint-sized space presented architect Brandon Pace with an outsized challenge: design a functional, comfortable, and stylish kitchen in the volume many new houses would devote to a walk-in closet. Pace managed that and more, taming a once-cluttered and awkward layout and finishing with room to spare. The result is a cooking center that looks clean, works clean, and punches way above its weight.
Working with only 80 square feet of floor space—the legacy of an early 1980s remodel—Pace simplified the geometry by wrapping an existing column and utility chase in a thick wall, into which he carved a refrigerator recess and microwave niche from the kitchen side and a narrow coat closet accessible from the adjacent entry hall. A room-width sink-and-range counter fills out the fixed elements of the plan.
The newly remodeled kitchen's floor plan.Sanders Pace Architecture
Responding to the clients' affinity for stainless steel, Pace tapped a local metal shop to fabricate the laboratory-sleek cabinets and countertops. A folded-metal detail gives each door and drawer front an integral recessed pull. “We don't have any exposed hardware,” Pace says. “It's such a small space; we really wanted the detailing to be minimal.” Stainless panels line the microwave niche and wrap up the walls to bookend the sink counter. Exposed cabinet legs give the kitchen an unfitted look. “We didn't want to tie it down, so to speak,” he explains.
The centerpiece is a versatile island on wheels. Four feet long in its resting state, the unit can extend leaves from both ends to double its size. That seals off circulation to and from the kitchen, Pace points out, but the effect on the cooks isn't claustrophobic. “It is pretty compact,” he says, “but when you're inside that space it's pretty comfortable.” When meals are ready, the island withdraws its wings and rolls into the dining area to act as a serving cart.