Nice kitchen island


62 Kitchen Island Ideas You'll Want to Copy

By

Farima Ferguson

Farima Ferguson

Farima Ferguson began her career at HGTV where she worked with designers to write about home design. Her work has appeared in HGTV, Insider Reviews, Travel Channel, and more.

Learn more about The Spruce's Editorial Process

Updated on 05/11/22

The Spruce / Christopher Lee Foto

The kitchen is oftentimes the heart of the home. It's where you and your family fuel up for the day, make memories during the holidays, entertain friends and family, and celebrate life's big moments during get-togethers.

Get Inspired by These Kitchen Island Ideas You'll Want to Copy

At the center of the kitchen is the kitchen island, the part of the room that provides an extra spot for meal prepping, cooking, gathering for casual meals or coffee breaks, and even extra storage space. Aside from all its practical uses, the island can also serve as a decorative focal point of the room. We've gathered our top kitchen island ideas, from big to small and simple to over-the-top to help inspire your kitchen design.

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60 Fabulous Kitchen Island Ideas

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1

Bold and Beautiful

We can’t take our eyes off of this stunning kitchen island in a Chicago home designed by Summer Thornton. Rather than settling for a workaday Carrara slab, she selected stone with swirls of violet and green. Pro tip: Want to bring color to your kitchen? Style your island with heaps of vibrant (and long-lasting) produce such as artichokes, citrus, and mini melons.

Thomas Loof

2

Modern Lovers

If you have the opportunity (not to mention the budget!) why not make your kitchen island a work of architecture? The designers at Home Studios were inspired by the work of Finnish modernist Alvar Aalto while creating this Brooklyn kitchen and dreamed up a custom island featuring ridged white edges and a Paonazzo marble top that nods to his buildings.

Brian Ferry

3

Sleek Waterfall

Waterfall countertops are a classic. We dig how this kitchen island, in the upstate New York home of Perifio designers Matt Bidgoli and Raphael Portet creates a frame around cabinets painted in a pleasing evergreen shade.

Isabel Parra

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4

Cottage Chic

Everything about this charming Minnesota lake house, designed by interior designer Anne McDonald with Plaad architects, was crafted to evoke the client’s Scandinavian heritage—without going over the top. This sweet custom kitchen island features Scandi-chic turned legs, a detail that cleverly nods to the home’s exterior columns.

Haris Kenjar

5

Salvage Beauty

“Reclaim” was the name of the game in this London townhouse designed by local firm Retrouvius. That philosophy extended to the upcycled kitchen island, which began life as a pair of mirrored museum cabinets. It’s topped with a slab of iroko, an African hardwood that Retrouvius salvages from government buildings.

Paul Raeside

6

Primary Rules

Forget white: In this happy Bay Area kitchen, designer Jessica Davis played with punchy primary colors. She painted the island in Farrow & Ball’s Hague Blue and topped it with a huge walnut slab.

Alanna Hale

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7

Color Blocked

If you can’t afford to replace your kitchen island, then work with what you’ve got! In this ultratrendy mother-daughter home in West Vancouver, Canada, PlaidFox worked with the existing island but remixed it with a fresh coat of teal paint, funky lighting, and plush seating.

Ema Peter

8

Minty Fresh

With a home just blocks from the beach, designer Caroline Rafferty made sure her Palm Beach home channelled all the good vibes of the tropical climate. In the kitchen, that meant complementing minty kitchen cabinets with a cream-colored island slab and honey-colored walnut cabinets below. Mother Nature knows best, after all!

Carmel Brantley

9

Allover Marble

We are staunch proponents of an allover pattern look, and the kitchen is no exception. In this art-filled San Francisco mansion, ELLE DECOR A-List designer Nicole Hollis clad the custom island, counters, and shelves in the same raspberry ripple-colored stone.

Douglas Friedman

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10

Old-World Glam

Pass the mustard! We’re obsessed with this custom yellow kitchen island (painted in Farrow & Ball’s India Yellow) in an 18th-century villa on the Spanish island (of course) of Menorca. The look gets further glam, old-world touches via the impressive marble backsplash and the gilt-bronze fringed chandelier, sourced from a palace in Madrid.

Ricardo Labougle

11

The Node Knows

Sure, kitchen islands combine form and function, but we’ve never seen one quite like the sprawling counter in Studio Piet Boon creative director Karin Meyn’s Amsterdam home. Here, the workspace branches off into a dining table for six guests, allowing for easygoing get-togethers.

Richard Powers

12

Monolithic Marble

This Los Angeles bungalow renovation, designed by LAUN, is a study in volumes, from the green lacquered storage block to the sculptural pink stone island. Renovators take note: The latter’s swirling surface makes a chic alternative to its black-and-white cousins.

Ye Rin Mok

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13

Terrazzo-Topped

The view is everything in this shou sugi ban house in Long Island. Therefore the interiors, designed by Joe Nahem, looked to nature wherever possible. For the custom kitchen island, speckled black countertops add some artful intrigue, while the blue cabinetry picks up the hue of the pool just outside.

Peter Murdock

14

Patinated Brass Island

This look, also in a Long Island home, is bound to please all of the minimalists out there: Designer Poonam Khanna kept the rest of the kitchen relatively muted with pale timber cabinetry and floors, but she clad the island in patinated brass for visual interest. The finish will wear over time, smudged with the family’s fingerprints. In fact, Khanna has instructed the residents not to polish it, as an ode to family life.

Stephen Kent Johnson

15

Sculptural Island

This sculptural kitchen island, in the Sydney home of Aussie designer Tamsin Johnson, ranks among the best we’ve ever seen. The bespoke creation, carved from a piece of gray Bianco Gioia stone, is equal parts work of art and family gathering spot.

Anson Smart

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16

Rustic yet Refined

This rustic kitchen, in a Sonoma, California, home designed by Ken Fulk, conjures the country simplicity of the surrounding vineyard estate. The weighty central island was a custom design made from dark timber and topped with a curve-edged slab of marble. Brutalist bar stools by Swedish designer Carl Malmsten complete the look.

Douglas Friedman

17

Lacquered Looker

Oliver M. Furth infused this Beverly Hills home with Hollywood glamour aplenty. The kitchen was no exception with its larger-than-life kitchen island coated in a sexy, high-gloss coat of Benjamin Moore’s Black Satin.

Roger Davies

18

All that Brass

Who said love of the material was ever a bad thing? Here, in a Milan apartment designed by ELLE DECOR A-List designer Hannes Peer, the island got a Midas touch with shiny brass cladding. To give it edge (literally and figuratively), Peer wrapped it in white-veined black marble.

Helenio Barbetta/Living Inside

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19

Pepper Granite

A Melbourne, Australia, home makes the most of an open-concept space with a streamlined island crafted of pepper granite.

Lisa Cohen

20

Walnut Veneer Island

Designers Kelli Wilde and Laurent Champeau gave this 19th-century Paris apartment a modern face-lift with a walnut-paneled kitchen, including a custom walnut-veneer kitchen island.

Simon Upton

Anna Fixsen

Deputy Digital Editor

Anna Fixsen, Deputy Digital Editor at ELLE DECOR, focuses on how to share the best of the design world through in-depth reportage and online storytelling. Prior to joining the staff, she has held positions at Architectural Digest, Metropolis, and Architectural Record magazines. elledecor.com 

Kitchen Island: 90 Kitchen Island Design Ideas with Photo

Kitchen Island, as you might guess from the name, is a working module, independent of the rest of the kitchen furniture. This layout has many advantages: you can approach the working area from any side, cook at once with the whole family, and the usable area of ​​\u200b\u200bthe kitchen increases. Here you can place not only a cooking area, but also storage shelves, a sink, a hob. The design of the kitchen island can be very different - our selection of ideas will allow you to feel all the delights of island life.

Johnny Gray Studios.

1. Smooth corners
Due to the fact that the corners are smoothed, there is much less space for walking around. Such a kitchen island made it possible to free up more space for the actual kitchen set.

Read more about the project with photo:

Artistic project in London Townhouse

J Witzel Interior Design

2. All the shelves
hung shelves usually “eat” the place and the mess at them is very stripped. In this kitchen, an island was used to store dishes and kitchen utensils, inside of which everything you need is located.

Garde Hvalsoe

3. Everything in sight
Don't be put off by the open shelves inside the kitchen island - the color and shape of the dishes placed there can create a rhythmic pattern of the room.

Roundhouse

Redesign London Limited

6. Display
The open shelves inside the kitchen island can be decorative. Here you can build "showcases" in which indoor plants, vases of flowers and other decorations will be located.

Peden & Pringle Ltd

7. Multifunctional approach
Kitchen islands can be integrated with appliances such as a microwave, oven, dishwasher and even a wine cooler.

Adam Chandler Ltd

8. Spell
U-shaped kitchen island is very spacious: cupboards for storing dishes, a cooking area, a bar can be easily located here. But for this option, you will need a fairly spacious kitchen so that you can freely approach the island.

Yuri Grishko

9. Inhabited island
In this small Moscow apartment (27 sq.m) there was simply no place for a full-fledged kitchen. Everything you need for cooking is contained in a kitchen island with a photo, household appliances are inside the stairs.

MORE ABOUT THE PROJECT WITH PHOTO:
Tiny loft in the apartment of a designer girl

Die Wohnplaner GmbH

Guests and family members will be able to sit around and watch the cooking process.

J.A.S. Design-Build

11. Straightforward
Choosing a kitchen island sink depends on your needs and possibilities. If there is no dishwasher and the dimensions of the kitchen allow, install a spacious sink.

SEE ALSO…
Which sink to choose for your kitchen and why?

Neptune by Donndorf Weimar (D) I by 3F Zürich (CH)

12. In the solids
If the sink and hob are next to each other on the kitchen island, take care of the insulation in advance: moisture must not get on the electrics.

Hill Farm Furniture Ltd

13. Unbearable lightness
Kitchen island hob requires extractor fan. The designers of this kitchen have found an alternative to heavy models - an extractor hood disguised as a chandelier.

Read more about the project with photo:
New Country MEBLE with a limited budget

JaureGui Architecture Interiors Construction

14. The thorough approach is the ideal option for the cuisine in the rustic style-solid kitchen, with solid wood, with ardent. legs and drawers for storage, as well as with a high tabletop.

Hopedale Builders, Inc.

15. Natural product
Rustic style implies a combination of natural materials - wood, metal, stone - as in this example.

SEE ALSO…
Quiz: Which Style of Kitchen Would You Like

Paul Craig Photography

16. Expanding Your Horizons
Don't be afraid to mix things up. In this London apartment, the modern kitchen nook is expanded with a long Victorian table.

SUBU Design Architecture

17. Loft style
This kitchen island is a good example of loft style. Its legs are made from waste water pipes, the tabletop is from old boards.

Chalet

18. Unity of opposites
The kitchen island in the photo is made in contrast: marble top, wooden base.

SEE ALSO…
Hardware: Kitchen worktop overview

LPASSE DESIGN

19. Provence
The kitchen island in this French home is made from rough metal counters, zinc countertops, old boards. The boards were selected individually: the drawing of each of them had to become part of the overall composition.

MORE ABOUT THE PROJECT WITH PHOTO:
In Provence, a tree in honor

Yvonne McFadden LLC

20. At a height of

The first option is convenient for cooking.

Lauren Levant Interior

21. Getting fit
In this example, the kitchen island is not the usual rectangular shape. It follows the shape of the wood from which the countertop is made.

Altius Design Group

22. Celestial body
The crescent-shaped kitchen island is multifunctional: the outside serves as a dining area, while the inside serves as a work area.

BARRETT STUDIO architects

23. Fit in the circle
The whole island or just the tabletop can be made with a crescent moon. The latter option is more economical, since a rectangular base is more common.

John Kraemer & Sons

24. In the spotlight
The work area is best placed in the center of the kitchen island so that guests and household can watch the cooking process like a performance on stage.

Treyone

25. Stand firmly on your feet
The highlight of this kitchen island is the unfinished solid wood legs.

Martha O'Hara Interiors

26. Highlights
A discreet kitchen island can stand out: upholstered bar stools set the right accents.

SEE ALSO…
How to choose fabric for new upholstery

27. Purity of experiment
Since the work and dining areas are combined on the kitchen island, it is necessary to provide an exhaust hood above the hob. It must be the same or larger than the panel size.

Matt Podesta

28. Size matters
If the island hood is smaller than the hob, there is a good chance that grease will settle on the kitchen island.

29. Passing moment
It is also important to set the correct width of the passages between the kitchen island and the set. To ensure that nothing interferes with your movements, they should be at least 1-1.2 m.

Kim Duffin for Sublime Luxury Kitchens & Bathrooms

30. Keep level
A kitchen island can have a multi-level structure: the work area should be on the same level as the kitchen set, and the dining area should be slightly higher.

Brayer Design

31. Lifebuoy
A round or oval kitchen table is best, even if the island itself is rectangular.

Orchid Newton ltd

32. Separately
The kitchen table can be either integrated into the island or stand alone. In this example, a notch has been made for it in the island.

Russell Taylor Architects

33. Mirror Reflection
The designers of this London kitchen used mirrors to design the island. So the room was filled with additional, reflected light.

MORE ABOUT THE PROJECT WITH PHOTO:
Metamorphoses of the King George Hospital

Kitchen Architecture Ltd

In this kitchen, it is only needed at night. During the day, the room is filled with light from the top and side windows.

Roundhouse

35. High level
It is better to pick up bar stools for the island table - as the height of the island is oriented towards cooking, which takes place while standing.

Paul Craig Photography

36. A level below
In this example, the designers placed the table below the work area. The table top is built into the drawers of the island at the usual table height.

37. Light at different levels
The dining area in this kitchen island is higher than the work area: this difference is reflected in the height of the pendant lights.

38. Three in one
This kitchen island consists of three modules of different heights - table, work area and shelving. This gives dynamics to an overly homogeneous interior.

Alexander White

39. Flow
The kitchen island can flow seamlessly into the dining table, just like in this Stockholm home.

Julia Solovieva | Studio SJull

40. Mobile bar counter
In this Moscow apartment, the kitchen island is complemented by a mobile bar counter made of wood, which can be pulled out only when necessary.

Design: Julia Solovieva

Wiedemann Werkstätten

MCDESIGN

42. Mobile version
In the kitchen there is a risk of constantly bumping into chairs and hitting them. Stools are more compact and mobile.

SEE ALSO…
Stool as a compact alternative to everything

The Brooklyn Home Company

43. Save space
The stool fits easily under the kitchen island - a real find for a small kitchen.

Emilie Castille-Architecture Intérieure&Décoration

44. We sit well
The length of the island table top is usually made at the rate of 60 cm per seater.

45. Get down to business
In this Berlin home, the staircase flows into the kitchen island countertop, creating a striking white accent.

mo+ architekten

46. Convertible island
This convertible island with sliding bench saves space in the kitchen.

SEE ALSO…
Basement kitchen? - Why not!

Artichoke

47. Two is better
Well, if the dimensions of the kitchen allow, why limit yourself to one island? They can be divided functionally: make a working area on one, and a dining area on the other.

R.Z.Owens Constructions

48. Multi-directional lighting
Guided track lights are ideal for creating local lighting on a kitchen island. You can alternate different lighting scenarios, highlighting a particular area.

FTF interior

49. A winning combination
You can combine different types of kitchen island lighting: spots for the work area, pendants for the dining area.

Design: FTF Interior

Breathe Architecture

50. Broken lines
The shape of this kitchen island echoes the backsplash pattern: broken lines, transitions from light to dark.

Read more about the project with photo:
Space Transformations in Cozy House

Go to the next page

Aleksandra Fedorova Bureau

51. Hide from the eyes
in this Moscow cuisine all household appliances are hidden from prying eyes: large - in the cabinets, the smaller one - in the kitchen island.

MORE ABOUT THE PROJECT WITH PHOTO:
Smart glass, suspended wall and snow-white minimalism

Luigi Rosselli Architects

You can achieve this effect with small means: for example, choosing the same dark color for the floor and the base of the kitchen island.

Jane Howell Interiors

53. From any direction
The convenience of a kitchen island is that you can approach it from any direction, you are free to move while cooking.

Lucy G Printed Image Splashbacks

54. Work triangle
The main thing is that the island helps to create the right work triangle : you can take food from the refrigerator, wash/cut, and then cook on the hob.

Architectural workshop za bor

55. Individual approach
Your individuality should be visible in everything. The owner of this Moscow apartment, an architect, designed and implemented the kitchen island project himself.

MORE ABOUT THE PROJECT WITH PHOTO:
Mobile space by architect Petr Zaitsev

Esther Hershcovich

not necessary.

Sustainable Kitchens

57. Driving!
In small kitchens, the island may not be stationary, but mobile, on wheels. It is easy to slide in when not in use.

aegis interior design ltd

Incorporated

59. Nice addition
The island on wheels can be moved up to the kitchen countertop at any time, thereby expanding the work area space.

Arciform

60. Plus one
The kitchen island on wheels can consist of several modules, the combinations of which will depend on the work to be done.

Colin Cadle Photography

61. Multitasking
Kitchen island on wheels can perform several functions in addition to the main one. For example, its can be used as a coffee table or serving trolley.

Bruce Kading Interior Design

62. Small and bold
A big kitchen doesn't have to have a big island: there should be just enough space for the cutting area.

Paris-Bruxelles

Webb & Brown-Neaves

64. Through fire, water and copper pipes
Remember that if you plan to use a kitchen island with a sink or stove, you will have to slightly raise the floor to connect the communications.

THE GOOD GUYS

65. Young and green
In this Australian home, greenery grows right on the kitchen island: a special opening in the countertop was provided for this at the design stage.

66. Back support
In this example, the kitchen island not only separates the work area from the dining area, but also serves as a backrest for the bench.

Fast Forward Unlimited

67. Top of the line
The island's L-shape made it possible to combine it with the kitchen nook. The only drawback is that the guests will sit with their backs to the cook.

68. Pure truth
When combining the island and the kitchen sofa, it is important to provide protection against steam and grease - for example, make a good hood. As an option - removable covers that can be washed.

SEE ALSO…
Sitting Well: How to rethink the kitchen nook

Blakes London

69. Contrast
A kitchen island can be a bright accent if you don't have the courage to use bright colors throughout the kitchen.

Melton Design Build

70. Everything in moderation
But you need to be careful with catchy details, otherwise there is a risk of overkill. But in this neutral kitchen, an island with bright tiles does not look too flashy.

Carole Hunter Home Design

71. Like a canvas
The designer of this kitchen was inspired by Mondrian's canvases and the idea of ​​primary colors. But not just copying his work, but trying to achieve color balance.

MORE ABOUT THE PROJECT WITH PHOTO:
Mondrian-inspired kitchen

Markus Hierhager Innenarchitektur

73. Breaking stereotypes
A black and white palette is by no means a boring solution: play with shapes, lines, levels.

SUPERGRAU

74. Make it dark
Black is said to reduce space. However, he is also able to make even a very simple interior expensive and status. Jan Showers

Australian Interior Design Awards

76. All-metal shell
This kitchen island's steel façade is a dramatic but impractical option: scratches are inevitable.

Design By Us Interior

77. Valuable item
The kitchen island's gold finish does not look outrageous or out of place in this simple interior: it harmonizes with parquet and hangings.

mckimm residential design

Standal Interiorismo + Reforma Integral

79. Maximum load
In this Barcelona apartment, the kitchen island is multifunctional: there is a stove, extractor hood, refrigerator and even a radiator. And on the back side, in the closet, is hidden ... a study.

MORE ABOUT THE PROJECT WITH PHOTO:
Modular space in bright colors

Look Design Group

80. Working time
A small working area can be located on the kitchen island itself. Just be sure to protect against splashes, steam and grease.

LATOON / BRASS design office

81. Artificial selection
Kitchen island LED lighting doesn't always look cold. With its help, you can create a very cozy atmosphere, as in this Yekaterinburg apartment.

MORE ABOUT THE PROJECT WITH PHOTO:
50 shades of white and the play of artificial light

Roundhouse

82. LED strip
In addition to the main illumination of the working area of ​​the island, try local lighting of the island. For example, experiment with an LED strip like in this example.

Read also ...
Light force: what do you really need to know about the backlight

MAL Corboy Design

IMPALA KITCHOROMS

BUTler Architects

85. Foreign Combine Japanese style: nothing superfluous and random, only necessary and simple furniture. Kitchen island - no sharp corners, only smooth lines and shapes.

Ashgrove Kitchens

86. In full sail
You can approach the design of the kitchen in an original way: choose an island in the form of a ship, on the mast of which you will place shelves, and in the hold - sections for storage.

DiMauro Architects, Inc.

87. Full speed ahead
The ship-island can cause difficulties. For example, special bar stools were selected for this kitchen, repeating the shape of the side.

Space Fitting Furniture Ltd

88. Atypical shape
The atypical shape of the kitchen island - without corners, smoothly flowing from the working area to the dining area - will save space.

Paul Craig Photography

89. Flying Saucer
The sterile white color of the flying saucer-like island blends well with the cosmic interior of this kitchen.

Charlotte Raynaud Studio - Design & Espaces

Kitchen island: how to plan your kitchen design with island

Editor's note: Article first published in 2015, updated in 2019

Found Associates

A kitchen with an island must be gigantic [No]
Not only a millionaire can buy his own island. At least when it comes to the kitchen. It is widely believed that only owners of huge apartments can afford island cuisine. Or at least huge kitchens. Indeed, in the interiors of a giant square, the island layout of the kitchen is almost a salvation from emptiness.

Douglas Design Studio

But the island can perform exactly the same task in a kitchen of quite usual sizes.

Look at the photo and mentally remove the island from it - the passage will seem too wide. Without an island, extra steps would have to be “wound” from one work surface to another.

A kitchen island is a storage system [Yes, but it's not the only one]
An island is essentially the center of attraction for all kitchen life: a multifunctional kitchen area where all kinds of kitchen activities take place on one patch (actually, an island). There may be a place for eating, a sink or a solid working and cooking surface for cooking.

Indeed, the basis of a kitchen island is usually kitchen cabinets with various contents: from shelves for dishes to built-in household appliances. Their number and configuration determines the "capacity" of the island.

Hortlund & Co

Pictured is an island. The kitchen cabinet was expanded with a countertop, beating the ledge

MORE PHOTOS…
Completed projects from around the world — kitchens with an island (2000+ photos)

Gares Conception

But in this photo - not an island, but a bar counter. The kitchen section installed under the worktop does not turn the counter into an island

mo+ architekten

Tatyana Arkhipova's studio

You can sit behind the kitchen island [Optional]

However, this is a desirable but not required scenario.

What exactly to sit on is the second question. The height of a standard kitchen is about 85–90 cm, and the height of the chair is designed for a surface of 75 cm from the floor: it will be uncomfortable on a regular stool. Bar required.

Nobilia Moscow monobrand kitchen showrooms

Fact: An island can look like an array of kitchen drawers. Sitting behind them is just plain uncomfortable. And then solutions are born, like a mobile bar counter, rolling over the island (forming a countertop).

Architectural workshop za bor

Kitchen island needed for zoning [Yes]
Even in a small studio space, an island can be used to conditionally divide the room into a kitchen and a living room. Or the kitchen and dining room.

The simplest possible design is the table island. Ask, why fix it tightly to the floor? The thing is that it may not be a simple table, but an architectural one - its position will affect the perception of space and proportions. Stationarity allows you to play with fulcrum, shift the center of gravity, bring electricity. An ordinary table cannot have a built-in outlet, but on an island one it is more than real.

OH, BOY! Interiors with a contemporary character

A sink is placed on a kitchen island [Yes, often]
A sink island is an engineering challenge. The supply of hot and cold water pipes, and most importantly, the device of a working drain will require raising the floor level, at least in a city apartment (in a private house, the possibilities for laying communications are much wider).

Author's design bureau Maria Chikunova SENSTYLE

According to current regulations, for the implementation of the flow, it is necessary to provide a pipe slope of 2 cm for each meter of its length. So consider: with a room size of 4x4 m, the center, and therefore approximately the sink, will be at a distance of about 2 m from the drain riser. Accordingly, it will be necessary to raise the floor by at least 10 cm, taking into account both the possible difference in floor heights and the diameter of the pipe itself.

But if we consider the same situation in the studio space of the kitchen-living room with an island, then the kitchen on the podium is quite a reasonable solution. The height difference serves as a conditional boundary between different zones.

Elena Gorenstein's workshop

Electrification and ventilation on the island [There are nuances]
It is not difficult to conduct electricity to an island or a peninsula. In addition to the socket, household appliances can be built into the island base cabinets. A microwave or ice maker requires an elementary shelf or compartment to fit, but the hob also needs an exhaust hood. And this is where the nuances begin.

Anton Likhtarovich

Just like that, stretching ventilation ducts along the ceiling will only work within the framework of the loft style. To be in harmony with other design options, cooking on the island will require the installation of a second (sewn or stretch) ceiling that hides communications. In extreme cases, a drywall box on a frame that masks the ventilation passage. And the end does not always justify the means, especially if the ceiling height is less than 3 m. Those that resemble a lamp - as in the photo - work in recirculation mode. That is, they do not need to be connected to the ventilation duct.

Kartun Architectural Bureau

There are peninsula-style kitchens [Yes]
If the island does not fit into the framework of a small kitchen, you can stop at a compromise solution - a peninsula. He acts in the "ocean" of space, while remaining connected with the "mainland" of the furniture set.

The peninsula is already possible on areas of about 8–12 sq.m and really improves practicality by creating two working triangles at once. And besides, it adds volumes for storage.

Geometrium - Interior design studio

The dining table adjacent to the kitchen set can also be considered a conditional peninsula. In this case, we are not talking about the usefulness of the design, but, as you can see in the photo, this option is also possible for 6 sq.m. At the same time, space is saved due to the adjoining.

The kitchen usually has one island [Optional]
Especially if the kitchen is very spacious and several people can manage the kitchen at the same time. Sometimes architects even plan twin sinks on twin islands.

Kronfoto

Rectangle-shaped kitchen island [No]
Indeed, to have a traditional island in a traditional kitchen, about 16 square meters of free space are required.

Johnny Gray Studios.

However, the island can also be of non-traditional design - we see an excellent solution in the photo of the project by British designers. The ergonomically shaped island with a worktop slanted according to the trajectory of movement in the kitchen made it possible to accommodate comfortably even in a modest area.

John Cole Architect

The predominantly rectangular and square outlines of the islands fit into spaces of regular shapes. But they are uncomfortable with their protruding corners. Fans of Feng Shui will definitely be against it. Corners do carry some risk of injury, especially for children. After all, unlike an ordinary table, the island is unshakable, which exacerbates the consequences of a collision. However, you can choose both a streamlined shape and a combined one - for example, the one in the photo: a sector one.

SF Architecture

From all the previous examples, you can see that the island is tolerant of different interior styles. Many will surely be attracted even by such a decorative solution as a “desert island” in the kitchen. Kitchen furniture in the color of the finish seems to fade into the background, and on the first place there are a wooden board table top and dishes in ethnic style. Complete relaxation, you can eat with your hands!

Nataly Komova

There are islands with “relief” [Yes]
A multi-level tabletop will successfully separate the work surface from the place for a feast or a bar counter.

Olga Klevakina

An example in the photo: the upper level of the island can generally "go to the sky", connecting with the ceiling. Electricity, and if desired, water, can be carried through the top

Modern sewer pumping units are able to pump wastewater under pressure from the point of consumption to the sewer riser of the apartment, including vertically. There is always a place for installing fairly compact equipment in the depths of the island. The diameter of the drain pipe, taking into account the load, can be selected to the minimum, so that the wiring of all pipes, water supply and drainage will require no more than 5 cm in height.


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