Centre of operations
Designed for an extended family, this house features a kitchen within a kitchen, making it suitable for a single chef or many cooks working simultaneously
Architects are often asked to design large kitchens where more than one person can work at the same time. This designer not only had to accommodate such a request he also had to ensure the kitchen would work for a single cook.
Architect Tim Bjella of Bjella Architecture says the house was designed for the Jain family an extended family group comprising three couples and their children.
"The kitchen needed to be large enough for the family, and it had to cater to a variety of different cooking styles," he says. "It also had to complement the highly sculptural architecture of the house."
Kapil Jain, one of the owners, says the family prefers to cook Indian food, which requires a lot of ingredients and spices.
"Every dish is cooked in a different way. At any one time, we might have three cooktops in action," he says. "At other times there might be just one person cooking."
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The solution was to design a kitchen within a kitchen. A central U-shaped kitchen sits within a large semicircular island, with additional kitchen facilities positioned around the outside.
"We separated the tasks so there are several different work zones in the kitchen," says Bjella.
"For example, a person working in the centre of the kitchen has a close work triangle or in this case a trapezoid. Outside of this space there is another food preparation area, a large cooking zone along one wall, and a cleanup area against another wall."
Bjella says specifying a variety of modular appliances also helped decentralise the tasks. And providing plenty of bench space allows ample room for food preparation and serving of the buffet-style meals preferred by the owners.
Visually, the kitchen has a sense of theatre that's in keeping with the sculptural look of the house. Curved, tapered soffits form a large ellipse above the kitchen, helping to define its position within the open-plan living area.
"The large soffits also lower the scale of the kitchen, making it a more comfortable space," says Bjella. "We were constantly balancing the desire for a contemporary design with the need to provide a warm, welcoming interior."
To this end, a mix of crisp stainless steel elements and quilted maple cabinetry was specified. The cabinetry beside the main cooking centre features pressed stainless steel, which gives it an industrial feel. A custom-designed 2.5m-long stainless steel hood with two chimneys reinforces the high-tech commercial look.
Blue granite benchtops and blue-painted soffits and sculptural elements introduce a jewel-like quality to the space.
Credit list
Architect
Builder
Lighting
Cabinetry
Sinks
Refrigeration
Ventilation
Kitchen manufacturer
Faux finishes
Flooring
Benchtops and splashback
Taps
Dishwashers
Story by: Colleen Hawkes
Home kitchen bathroom commercial design
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