Archive for the ‘Special Rooms’ Category

Granite countertops are used in most kitchen remodels. Should quartz get more than second billing?

Friday, March 11th, 2011

Whether homeowners work on it before a meal or gather around it afterward, the countertop is arguably the most visible item in a kitchen. And according to a 2010 REMODELING Reader Panel survey, homeowners are choosing granite countertops by a margin of about 3 to 1 over the next most popular materials.

But why does granite get all the attention? Manufacturers and installers of granite and quartz weigh in on the benefits of each type of stone.

Pressure & Time
After nature does its part, mined quartz is crushed and mixed with resin to create subtly patterned slabs.

Beauty & Movement
“The customers we see that are looking at granite really are looking for that beauty and movement in the stone,” says Troy Roering, sales and marketing manager for Stone Holding Co., in Waite Park, Minn. “With granite, it’s like choosing a piece of art, whereas customers who want a more consistent look will choose quartz.”

Remodeler Ben Thompson agrees. “Both granite and quartz are premium products, but it comes down to aesthetics,” says the co-owner of Thompson Remodeling, in Grand Rapids, Mich., noting granite’s impact during the sales process. “We can take our clients shopping, pull out a big slab and show them that it’s the most dramatic and substantial item they’re getting for their new kitchen.”

At the same time, Cambria PR director Stacia Smith says quartz is one of the fastest growing surfacing categories in the industry. “Granite is a mix of quartz, filament, and mica, and it’s the quartz component that gives the stone its strength,” she says. “While some granites can have as little as 20% or 30% quartz, a quartz countertop can have as much as 93% quartz and only 7% coloring and binding.”

Porous granite also requires sealing against moisture, adds Hanwha Surfaces product designer Lisa Herreth, and the consistency of quartz means the material can be seamed more easily than granite where fabricators may need to work with or around veining and inclusions in the stone. To that end, Thompson says he often finds that quartz installations require more seaming, while granite installations result in more waste.

Price It
For customers concerned about cost, Roering says that quartz does tend to cost more than base-level granite. However, “granite price has nothing to do with quality and everything to do with availability of that stone in the world,” he says. “If they’re quarrying 10 blocks and nine of them are usable, we would put that granite at a level-one or -two price point. But if only one of the 10 is usable, it would likely come in at a premium pricing category.”

Herreth adds that most quartz is cost-competitive with granite, particularly since the price of some stones has dropped dramatically in recent years, and can include green elements such as recycled content (usually glass), which might interest some homeowners. “Stone materials are going to last a lifetime,” she says, “so homeowners should consider choosing colors and patterns that will stay in style for the duration.”

Lauren Hunter, associate editor, REMODELING MAGAZINE.

Designing the multi-cook kitchen!

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011

Dual sinks, decentralized refrigeration, accessible appliances, and various counter heights are among the considerations when designing for multiple cooks in the kitchen.

By Kathleen Donohue and Martha Kerr, Neil Kelly Design/Build Remodeling

 

Planning a kitchen for multiple cooks can involve many different situations, and in order to meet clients’ needs there’s a lot of information to gather regarding how they use their kitchen. Just accepting a “multi-cook kitchen” description does not give you a clear-enough picture of what is truly needed, and your chances of coming up with just the right design for that client are a shot in the dark until you delve deeper with more targeted questions.

Are the cooks partners in meal preparation, or is there a chief cook and assistants? Is it a multi-generational family where grandparents and children cook along with the mom or dad? Does one of the cooks only prepare salads and hors d’ouvres? Maybe there’s a “designated griller” in the family. The answers to the various scenarios for the particular family will determine how we approach creating the multi-cook kitchen.

To start, we need to identify if the family wants and has room for dual-cooking centers. Can we include two sinks (a cleanup area and a prep sink), or do we include two sinks and two dishwashers? Should refrigeration be “decentralized” and located at point of first use so that each cook has access to the refrigerated items they use most often, or do we carefully locate a single refrigerator so that it is accessible to each cook without crossing their work path or causing a log jam when the door is opened?

If there is room and budget allows, a second sink almost always makes a multi-cook kitchen function better. A prep sink near a cook top, baking center, or prep area can keep cooks out of each other’s way.  More targeted questions will help you to determine if it needs to be a small bar sink or a larger prep sink.

A high-functioning multi-cook kitchen with unlimited space or unlimited budgets will vary greatly from the average multi-cook kitchen. Our everyday multi-cook kitchen would include two work triangles that preferably don’t intersect one another, or do so infrequently. One cook might go from the refrigerator to the second sink and microwave (located to the right of the refrigerator) and one might go from the refrigerator to the primary sink and cooking area to the left of the refrigerator.

Pay special attention to the door swings of appliances. We always draw them open, with dotted lines on the floor plan, so clients can visualize walking through the space while someone else may be accessing them from any particular work center. Try to engage your clients in visualizing working together in a space doing specific tasks. This helps to flesh out any work patterns or tasks they may have forgotten to mention but could be a serious inconvenience once the kitchen is installed.

The ideal multi-cook kitchen — with lots of space and no budget restrictions — would include two sources of refrigeration, a cook top (or perhaps separate cook tops, one two-burner gas and one two-burner magnetic induction) with separate wall ovens, two sinks, and two dishwashers. A microwave drawer might be included in a snack center along with under-cabinet refrigeration. Specialty steam ovens, speed-cook ovens, or convection ovens might also be desired — this is where asking questions about what and how they like to cook can really pay off.

Kitchen design is really all about creating spaces that work for the family that lives in the house.  Appliance placement, sufficient counter surface in the work areas, proper and accessible storage, and really good task lighting are all considerations.

If baking is a primary function, a lowered countertop for the baking center may also double as the work surface for the children who are learning to cook with their parents. If child participation is a primary goal, think about the ages and abilities of the children as you create the different work centers. The foodstuffs, utensils, appliances, and counter surface all need to be accessible.

If the multi-cook kitchen is being designed for a couple who both love to cook and entertain, you will likely be including a beverage center. The center could be located separately in a butler’s pantry or could occupy a multi-use area, such as a corner of an island, the end of a peninsula, or a raised serving area, and might include the coffee/espresso machine, a wine chiller, or under-cabinet refrigerator/ice maker, and perhaps a single drawer dishwasher. This area would also store the wine glasses, cocktail glasses, coffee cups, and other amenities needed for the beverage center.

Finally, a word about islands:  Islands in kitchens that have a 36-inch-high countertop on all four sides provide a great area for family cooking projects. With the counter surface being accessible on all four sides, you could likely have as many as eight people working around the island. If it’s a growing family, perhaps you have stools on one or two sides for the kids to have easy access. Whether it’s a family Christmas cookie project or the girl scout troop making papier-mâché animals, a kitchen island that is maintained at one height provides a fabulous work surface for many hands. Islands are a natural gathering spot, and, as long as they don’t block critical access lanes, they are the perfect multi-use center of any multi-cook kitchen.

Outdoor Living Areas

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

Even in New Hampshire, we are increasingly designing our homes to allow us to extend our enjoyment of the outdoors from the summer months into spring and fall. Outdoor living areas are an integral part of today’s lifestyle, blurring the distinction between indoor and outdoor living.  From Victorian lakefront homes to timbered hilltop retreats, outdoor spaces are now considered essential to harmonious living, dining, entertaining and relaxing. Expanding the overall liveable square footage of a home is easily achieved if these outdoor spaces are considered from the beginning of the design process.

BackyardBliss2

The best way to create a smooth transition from indoors to outdoors is proper choice in materials. Wall finishes, flooring, paint colors and fixtures can and should all be carried from the interior space to the outdoor living areas. For example, repeating a granite or stone slab material that was chosen for the kitchen counter or interior wet bar to the exterior fireplace surround will create a feeling of continuity. Wall treatments such as Italian plaster, natural stone and faux finishes can also be used indoors as well as outdoors to further add to continuity of design.

Today’s outdoor rooms are not your average backyard spaces. They incorporate televisions, integrated audio/visual systems, fireplaces, wet bars and outdoor kitchens. These spaces should be considered as part of the bigger picture. This integration of outdoor living rooms, kitchens, televisions and entertainment systems, bars and outdoor showers is a critical component in creating a lifestyle experience to which most homeowners aspire.

Comfortable seating is a must as is a functional and relaxing dining area. Choices in furnishings and colors to coordinate with the interior of the home will further a feeling of connectedness, making the outdoor living space feel like an extension of the interior.  Thoughtful planning and design incorporating architectural overhangs, heating, lighting and comfortable, durable materials are the foundation of effective outdoor rooms.

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At Northcape Design, we offer our customers a full line of outdoor cabinetry and appliances.   Atlantis outdoor cabinetry is weatherproof, meaning it is capable of being exposed to sun, rain, snow, and extreme high and low temperatures without being effected. All cabinetry boxes (and some doors and drawers) are made from solid marine-grade polymer Perma-Panel, which gives Atlantis cabinetry its weatherproof qualities. It can be placed poolside, or on a deck or patio without covering and can stand up to anything Mother Nature can dish out.  Solid wood doors and drawer heads are available in Teak, Cypress and Bamboo, three wood species often used in outdoor furniture and other outdoor applications.

The array of outdoor appliances including built-in grills, side burners, ventilation hoods, refrigerators, cocktail/beer stations and ice machines add flair and convenience to outdoor cooking and entertaining. Atlantis Outdoor Kitchens offers the finest appliances made especially for outdoor living from trusted names such as Lynx, Marvel and Vermont Castings.

Sounds nice, doesn’t it!  Please contact us – We would be happy to give you some ideas on enhancing your outdoor living spaces.

Bartenders_Paradise1

Is There a Wine Cellar in Your Future?

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

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“Wine is the most civilized thing in the world.”  Ernest Hemingway

 

There is little that symbolizes our sense of romance more perfectly than a bottle of wine.  Wine becomes the embodiment of celebration and merriment as we raise our glasses, make our heartfelt toasts and clink our glasses! 

 

Today, more homeowners are discovering the pleasures of storing wine in their homes.  Wine cellars, once considered an indulgence, have become more accessible, convenient and practical.  There are a wide variety of options available, ranging from a small under counter cooler to a walk-in wine cellar with an adjacent “grotto” tasting room.  Small coolers can store 25 to 100 bottles; larger refrigerated cabinet units can hold up to 500 bottles.  With a walk-in cellar the sky is the limit, and it will accommodate the wines that are ready to drink now as well as that special Napa Cabernet or French Bordeaux that will improve over years of cellaring.

 

For many years, my own “wine cellar” was a spare closet in the basement, a marginal solution at best.  I became inspired to design and build my own real wine cellar after Robin and I attended a meeting in the Napa Valley area.  We spent an extra five days touring the vineyards and sampling many wonderful wines.  After seeing some incredible wine cellars and tasting rooms, our old closet in the basement no longer measured up!  However, there was a 6’ by 7’ corner of my basement workshop next to the family room that I really wasn’t using to its potential . . .

 

I began my education on wine cellar construction.  The three enemies of wine are heat, light and vibration.  Of these, heat is the major concern.  Most experts agree that a constant temperature of about 55 degrees Fahrenheit and a relative humidity of 60 to 70% are ideal for long-term wine storage.  Temperature fluxuations can push wine past the cork as it expands and suck air into the bottle as it cools, increasing the ullage and therefore the amount of oxygen.  The addition of oxygen can age wine prematurely.  

 

As I started to gather information regarding wine cellars, I mistakenly believed that a basement area would be a suitable place to site a passively cooled cellar.  I read the only book that I could find on wine cellar construction and the author convinced me that it is extremely difficult to regulate the temperature in a passively cooled wine cellar.  In fact he recommends insulating all walls equally, even the side facing the foundation. The book, “How and Why to Build a Wine Cellar, 3rd Edition” by Richard M. Gold, Ph.D. is available on Amazon.COM and is full of great information.  I also gleaned many details for wine racking from racking suppliers on the Internet. 

 

Here are a few of my notes on the construction of my cellar:

FRAMING:

Standard 2×4 or 2×6 framing is fine as long as you can fit the required insulation in the walls and ceiling.  You may need to “furr-out” existing framing.

VAPOR BARRIER:

A vapor barrier is required if refrigeration is used.  The plastic should be applied to the warm side of the wall and ceiling.  In this case that would the exterior of the cellar.

INSULATION:

The general rule of thumb is “more the better”.  Minimum requirements are R-19 in the walls and R-30 in the ceiling.  You can use fiberglass batts, Styrofoam or foil-face rigid insulation, sprayed foam or blown-in insulation.  Use whatever works in your situation.

AIR INFILTRATION BARRIER:

I used Tyvek on the interior of the walls and ceiling, and taped the joints to further limit any migration of air.

INTERIOR WALLS & CEILING:

You can use a wide variety of wood paneling including cedar, mahogany and redwood.  This is generally left without any sealer or finish so that moisture is not trapped under the finish.  Drywall can be used if it is the moisture resistant green board type.  It can be painted with mildew resistant latex paint.

CELLAR DOORS:

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An exterior grade door must be installed as a cellar door.  It is very important to have complete weather-stripping on the jamb and a good quality sweep on the bottom.  Any glass inserts must be double-pane insulating glass.

FLOORING:

Tile can be used, but a concrete floor can be fine as is or stained with an opaque concrete stain.

LIGHTING:

Lighting can really enhance the ambience of a cellar.  Use dimmers to control the brightness (and the heat!).  Rope lighting is easy to install and can be used for display areas.

REFRIGERATION:

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There are several different types of cooling systems including units that exhaust into an adjacent room and split systems that have condensing units located outside the house.  We used a “WhisperCool” through wall unit and it is performing beautifully.  Whatever unit you use should be sized for the cubic space that you have.

WINE RACKING:

The possibilities are numerous and range from boards on cement blocks to custom designed racking that looks like it came from the finest furniture craftsman.  I used red cedar to match the paneling and left it unfinished.

 

Cheers!!