Saskatoon StarPhoenix

CREATING THE PERFECT KITCHEN ISLAND

Do you want a sink or stovetop? One level or two? Choose your options — and size — carefully

- MELISSA RAYWORTH Online: studioten2­5.com ■ www.burnhamdes­ign.com ■ www.jdkinterio­rs.com ■ The Associated Press

Interior designer Abbe Fenimore knew that adding a kitchen island was one of the most important decisions she’d make in remodellin­g her 1940s-era home.

A well-designed kitchen island can offer storage space, a work surface, comfortabl­e seating — even a cooktop or spare sink.

But like so many aspects of kitchen design, it needs to be planned with extra care. An item this large and central isn’t something you’ll want to replace within a few years.

So Fenimore and her husband created a cardboard island in their kitchen with precise dimensions to live with it before committing.

They tinkered with the details on its size and location. They debated which features were necessary and which were too much of a splurge or took up too much space.

In the end, that island “has become the literal hub in our home for socializin­g,” Fenimore says.

We’ve asked Fenimore, founder of the design firm Studio Ten 25, and two other interior designers — Betsy Burnham and Jenny Kirschner — for their thoughts on great kitchen-island designs and trends.

MAP OUT THE DETAILS

Because careful planning is so important, Burnham suggests working with a designer on kitchen-island design or finding resources online for drawing up a floor plan.

“You’re going to need about three feet of space around it — at least three,” she says. Homeowners sometimes end up with too crowded a kitchen if they choose an island that’s too large.

“It shouldn’t literally be an island off by itself,” Burnham says, “but it shouldn’t be too close to perimeter countertop­s either.”

Other important questions: How many people do you want to seat? Leave plenty of depth for people’s legs when they sit on bar stools or seats at your island.

And do you want one level or two? Burnham loves the clean lines of one level surface.

But Kirschner sometimes designs an island with two levels — one at counter height for cooking prep and a lower level at table height, so you can sit in chairs rather than bar stools.

Families with young kids who worry about little ones falling off bar stools often love this option, Kirschner says.

SPECIALTY STORAGE

Some of Fenimore’s favourite elements are deep, pullout drawers for pots and pans, and drawers with mechanisms that lift a mixer or other small appliance up and out for easy use. Also: drawers designed to hold containers of spices, and deep drawers holding metal containers for serving utensils, as you might see in a restaurant kitchen.

“A lot of people underestim­ate storage needs,” Fenimore says, so really think about how you cook and what you use.

Kirschner also suggests considerin­g what you might want to store that isn’t technicall­y a kitchen item. Her island includes drawers for her children’s art supplies because the island is where they do arts and crafts projects.

Islands often have closed storage, but some people prefer some open shelving.

Fenimore has a trash can built into her island, with a stainless steel opening in the island’s surface where unwanted items can easily be swept during cooking. It’s a detail that didn’t add much to the cost but makes life exponentia­lly easier.

THE COOKTOP QUESTION

It sounds lovely — having your stovetop in the island so you can chat with someone seated there while you’re cooking. But things splatter, Kirschner points out.

And tearing up the floor to add power and gas lines can be expensive if your kitchen doesn’t already have these utilities in the middle of the floor.

The same goes for adding a sink to your island: These designers say an island sink is a great feature and popular with clients, but you have to consider the expense if you’ll need plumbing work done in the floor.

Lastly, your cooktop needs ventilatio­n. Do you want a range hood mounted in the ceiling and looming over your kitchen island?

“There are downdraft vents,” Kirschner says, “but they tend to not work nearly as well” at ventilatin­g your cooking space as overhead ranges do.

MATCH OR CO-ORDINATE?

Some people love an island that seamlessly matches the rest of the kitchen, with countertop­s and cabinetry identical to what runs along the room’s perimeter.

But our three designers say you can also think of your island like a piece of gorgeous furniture that is co-ordinated with the rest of the room but a little different. If you want the island to be the kitchen’s focal point, Kirschner says, get creative.

She loves natural stone surfaces for kitchen islands, especially quartzite, which she says has beautiful veins of colour but is more durable than marble.

Burnham agrees that a kitchen island can be a dramatic statement, and there are many style options. Do you want a European farm-table look, or modern and sleek marble?

“We’ve seen a lot of the dark blues and greys and greens, in reaction to all the white kitchens we were seeing for a while,” Burnham says.

“Maybe mix things up. Keep all the countertop­s the same, but maybe the perimeter cabinetry is one colour and the island cabinetry is a different colour.”

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R PATEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? One key to planning a functional kitchen island, designer Betsy Burnham advises, is leaving plenty of depth for legroom along one or two sides for comfortabl­e seating.
CHRISTOPHE­R PATEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS One key to planning a functional kitchen island, designer Betsy Burnham advises, is leaving plenty of depth for legroom along one or two sides for comfortabl­e seating.
 ?? JENNA PEFFLEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This urban farmhouse style kitchen, designed by Betsy Burnham, has an island that offers ample storage and an extra prep sink.
JENNA PEFFLEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This urban farmhouse style kitchen, designed by Betsy Burnham, has an island that offers ample storage and an extra prep sink.

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