Times Colonist

House Beautiful: Doubling a kitchen’s size

Switching spaces with the dining room doubles kitchen’s size

- SANDY DENEAU DUNHAM

They didn’t want a bigger house.

Or a different house. Or a new neighbourh­ood, or new neighbours.

But the time had come for a change — and suddenly, quite a few things needed changing.

Trace and Reid’s home was built in the late 1990s.

It had been remodelled once and, somewhere along the line, cultivated a random collection of esthetics.

Outside, for example, tropical yellow paint, stucco siding and swaying palm trees screamed “Mediterran­ean.”

Inside, Trace says, there was “dark cherry wood everywhere,” along with an inexplicab­ly angled hallway and a “monstrosit­y of travertine and marble” masqueradi­ng as a fireplace.

Most sadly of all, crammed into a corner, oddly shaped and dark, the little-bitty kitchen sighed “Knights of the Round Table.” That kitchen … that was the catalyst. “The yard was wackadoodl­e and we lived with that ugly paint colour for a long time,” Trace says.

“But the kitchen was so small. We like to entertain and cook and we wanted an island so bad. We were lighting our stove with matches for years, like camping. We got tired of that.”

Interior designer Hilary Young had just the wake-up call they needed — a contempora­ry renovation that ended up making over, and taking over, the entire first floor.

“They thought they’d leave the kitchen where it was, with its single, small window, and open it up to the living area a bit,” Young says.

“More than most clients, they actually needed a big kitchen, and the original space literally was 100 square feet.

“We proposed moving the kitchen to what was the dining room, and moving the dining table to what was previously the kitchen.

“It increased the size of the kitchen by about double.”

‘And then we ended up rearrangin­g the ‘back of the house’ to incorporat­e a den, office, powder room, laundry and mudroom.” Trace calls the kitchen decision “an aha moment.” And now, it’s ahh all around: an entire level of cohesive colours, natural flow and clear connection­s to a single theme, and to the whole outdoors.

“We opened up walls to the exterior, replacing them with windows and glass doors to capture light from sunrise to sunset,” Young says. “It was really dark. Now it feels twice as big.”

In the transforme­d, transporte­d kitchen, there’s now space for wall ovens, a larger refrigerat­or and a separate range.

In the newly bright dining area, formerly the claustroph­obic kitchen, Young “created architectu­re with cabinets by making a wall of storage that doesn’t feel like storage,” she says. (There’s even a bar hiding in the built-in cabinetry. “Reid got into craft cocktails after the remodel,” Trace says.)

Trace and Reid, who have two boys (Tate, 10, and 11-year-old Corbin), already had lovely furniture; a vision (“We love modern, but not cold. Warm woods, not too much white,” Trace says); and colourful, meaningful artwork.

“I took cues from that,” Young says. “I felt the finishes needed to be subtle background colours and richness, with artwork the primary.”

One particular piece, by Reid’s childhood friend John Grade, anchors the newly straighten­ed hallway, now lined with wood. “It’s a nice statement from the front door,” Young says.

But not all of Reid’s special possession­s made the cut for the fabulously contempora­ry new first floor. “Reid and I both have very strong opinions,” Trace says. “Reid is a big record collector, and has lots of records and a turntable. There are these speakers he loved — a man thing — and wanted to display [in the living room]. They’re now in a perfect space upstairs, in the bedroom. He can go out on the deck and listen to Miles Davis.

“Hilary really was a perfect mediator.”

 ??  ?? The monochroma­tic colour scheme in the remodelled living room offers a subtle background palette to let the art and rug pop. Trace says the art has sentimenta­l value because her partner, Reid, a music fan, “traded all these records for that piece.”
The monochroma­tic colour scheme in the remodelled living room offers a subtle background palette to let the art and rug pop. Trace says the art has sentimenta­l value because her partner, Reid, a music fan, “traded all these records for that piece.”
 ??  ?? Glass doors and windows connect the formerly dark dining area with exterior spaces, and lots of light.
Glass doors and windows connect the formerly dark dining area with exterior spaces, and lots of light.
 ??  ?? Trace and Reid’s shiny new kitchen switched places with the dining area. The grey cabinets are sturdy and easy to clean, Trace says, and the coffee maker parks in an appliance garage to the left. “I have a problem with clutter on the countertop­s,” says...
Trace and Reid’s shiny new kitchen switched places with the dining area. The grey cabinets are sturdy and easy to clean, Trace says, and the coffee maker parks in an appliance garage to the left. “I have a problem with clutter on the countertop­s,” says...
 ??  ?? Above: New treads, handrail and windows carry the contempora­ry theme to the second level. Right: Art by Reid’s childhood friend John Grade hangs at the end of the newly straighten­ed and wood-lined hallway, and is lighted from the sides and overhead.
Above: New treads, handrail and windows carry the contempora­ry theme to the second level. Right: Art by Reid’s childhood friend John Grade hangs at the end of the newly straighten­ed and wood-lined hallway, and is lighted from the sides and overhead.
 ??  ?? The first-level bathroom stayed where it was, but was reduced in size, reconfigur­ed and made into more of a powder room, Trace says.
The first-level bathroom stayed where it was, but was reduced in size, reconfigur­ed and made into more of a powder room, Trace says.
 ??  ?? The fireplace in the living area was “totally redone, down to the drywall,” says Young. “This is much more streamline­d and modern,” Trace adds.
The fireplace in the living area was “totally redone, down to the drywall,” says Young. “This is much more streamline­d and modern,” Trace adds.
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