Designed by Bryan Anderson
New homeowners of this multi-level Post Modern home—designed and built by award-winning architect Howard Goltz and his wife, interior designer, Janet Goltz, for their own family in the mid-1980’s—sought to update the kitchen and informal dining, with more room for family members to function and gather in the area, without adding space and respecting the original design. Essential to this goal was pushing the run of base cabinets with sink and dishwasher into an existing—and unused—interior planter. This simple move created two valuable feet through the middle of the kitchen, allowing an expanded island to include seating. Replacing low-hanging cabinets above the island with a suspended exhaust hood opened visual space to the physical. New cabinetry was designed, built, and inserted—in some cases adjacent to existing—for a seamless effect. Quarry tile flooring was replaced with matching oak, blurring the boundary between formal and informal spaces, while working applicances were retained for budget-friendly efficiency.
Construction by Terra Firma Building and Remodeling
Interior Design by Liquidpink Interiors
Photography by Spacecrafting
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