Talk Back
Post a CommentHousingZone Most Popular Stories
- A smaller home can still be beautiful
- Tapping an Overlooked Homebuying Market: Single Women
- 10 keys to a more streamlined homebuilding company
- Retool your sales process to meet tougher mortgage guidelines
- Presenting the 50+ Housing Awards of 2008
- The Land Dilemma: Is it Time to Buy or Sell?
- Here are the 100 Best New Products
- Minimalist Modern House Showcases Art and Architecture
- Modular and Green
- Wood vs. Engineered Lumber
Remodeling an Outmoded Kitchen
Gutting an outmoded kitchen reflected the home's architecture while accommodating the owners' love and skill for cooking
Meghan Haynes
May 1, 2007
Professional Remodeler
|
![]() |
| Incorporating wish-list accessories and funtionality was important to both Jertberg and his wife - Jertberg's big items were a sizeable stainless steel range, John Boos & Co. end-grain butcher block cutting board and a stainless steel backsplash. After photos by Gail Owens Photography |
There was nothing in the space worth salvaging from the homeowners' vantage point. Jertberg was anxious to get remodeling ideas for the kitchen layout from his designer, who did not live in the space everyday and could see it with fresh eyes. The team decided to gut the space and start from scratch.
More cabinets and drawers combined with a credenza anchored by two pantries add storage. The new kitchen also boasts top-end appliances, textured black granite countertops and zoned lighting programmed for both tasks and moods. Jertberg is most pleased with the balance between technically superior appliances and earth-friendly choices that complement the home's style.
![]() |
"My home is in an older neighborhood that is filled with craftsman homes, and that is one of the things I love about my neighborhood. I always consider how well what I am doing fits the spirit of the era of the home," Jertberg says. "I am not, however, a slave to historical accuracy, and it was important that with something like the countertops, for example, that I had elements that were interesting and different.
"My intention with the aesthetic was to use woods and stay true to the craftsmanship and to echo the area without being slave to historic preservation."
|
© 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Digg This



