Kitchen Medium Hardwood Floors Concrete Counters Pendant Lighting Design Photos and Ideas

The project team stripped the house to its framing and foundation to upgrade the systems and add insulation, keeping the original exterior detailing intact. When they discovered that a spacer in the triple-pane windows they’d selected contained an LBC “Red List” material, the manufacturer, Unilux, changed the product to comply with LBC guidelines.
The kitchen opens out into the dining room and living area, and features an island countertop from Caesarstone. The lighting throughout is from Liteline.
This backsplash may only cover a small surface area, but its asymmetric tiles are the kitchen’s pièce de résistance.
The trusses were made by the building team from solid Australian hardwood and are critical in supporting the roof structure where the mezzanine level previously sat.
In this Tasmanian midcentury, the architects gently reworked the interior layout, replacing a small sitting room and bath/laundry with a new kitchen. The kitchen's wood cabinetry "references the original timber joinery elsewhere," write the architects.
The kitchen, dining, and living area features simple furnishings and a neutral palette—the views are the focal point in the design.
The light-filled kitchen is fitted out with glass fiber-reinforced concrete counters, quartern-sawn eucalyptus cabinets, as well as Sub-Zero, Wolf and Miele appliances.
To create more natural light, Brentwood Builders also added a back door to the kitchen.
Two French doors open up the open-plan kitchen and dining area to a covered outdoor terrace overlooking the water.
The kitchen's new position takes advantage of morning light. Note how the white countertop doesn't disturb the original windows.
A kitchen in the smallest of the three buildings.
The kitchen and dining connects to the living room.
Kitchen looking into the dining and out towards the Atlantic Ocean.  The collar ties are exposed to express the homes structural integrity and bring down the scale of the space