The Kitchen
This is the first domain specific posting about a sub-element of the house (save for various musings on the bridge which is a major project in its own right). Since most of the primary elements of the house design are done (or done until we find out we can't afford floor to ceiling windows) it's time to focus on designs for the next level of key items. The kitchen is first up.
The kitchen tends to be the most expensive room in the typical house (on an all inclusive cost per sq ft basis). This is probably obvious to most people given the number of expensive appliances and finishes that are jammed into an often small space. We went to a kitchen design store the other day and they asked our budget which I gave some ballpark figures on what I calculated for the appliances, cabinets, fixtures, etc. That didn't add up to them. They wanted to know the $/sq ft we were planning on. I had never thought of it this way. Part of the challenge for us is the kitchen is meant to be open to the dining and living room so where the kitchen stops and others begin is not clear. I could condense it down to have a better number but methinks it best to stick to my original calculation and find a reasonable sq ft to apply.
In any case, we think we've actually found most of the appliances we want. We both love to cook and can prove that by being the only people I know who live in NYC and actually cook 5-6 nights a week. Much credit for this goes to the girl as she enjoys it to the level of being able to crank meals out night after night after a days work. That's not for me. I prefer the plan and execute all day on the weekend production. I rarely can plan more than a day ahead for a meal so when I'm doing a big one I need to spend the morning deciding, the afternoon buying, and the evening cooking (and enjoying my wine; there are few better experiences than "cooking with wine").
Back to the appliances. Even though we like to cook we don't need many fancy things. We're pretty much old school DIY in the kitchen types. The array of crazy new tools baffle us and a few experiences show how early enthusiasm with a dehydrator leads to it collecting dust in the pantry after a month. We even have debated not having a D/W as we never use the one we have in the apt but we'll probably have one since real estate people tell us it shows its value in resale. LG has great french door fridges with lower drawer freezers that are the most energy efficient of main stream makers (there are some better ones for super energy efficient which tend to be less aesthetically appealing and more expensive). And they are stainless steel and mid-priced ($1500-2000).
The stove/range is where the real decision comes in. The "trophy" range in the Viking/Thermodore class is very tempting. I did some research with consumer reports and on other online places and as you'd expect they basically concluded they don't cook any better than your average $1200-1800 stove (and even one $600 model got high grades). However, this is not a passionless utilitarian debate. They look good! Also, ironically they are the only ovens which still use the old fashioned temperature knob instead of digital programming. No biggie to me but the girl don't play digital in her cooking. So we've compromised on this: we've picked out our trophy range (Thermodore professional; we like the temperature dial in the middle) either as one range or separate top and oven and have a fallback to a midrange if budget is tight (probably GE Profile, JennAir, or similar in that class).
Cabinets are expensive. Our architect has been advising Ikea but I DESPISE Ikea (more on that in another post but it is cheap and poorly made crap that should have no places in a nice modern home). We are hoping to keep costs down by not having upper cabinets over the counters just under counter and an island. We'll have open shelving above which we prefer anyway and gives the kitchen a lighter more open feeling. I really like the new lines of back painted with glass fronts that are around. But they are very expensive and our aforementioned kitchen shop advised that if we don't want to spend $35-50k on a kitchen to look for lacquer painted MDF instead. This should work for us and cut the cost in half. We want a strongly colored kitchen and are leaning toward red for the cabinets but other colors will be explored. We're leaning toward engineered granite or concrete for countertops.
All-in-all our new kitchen will be a huge novelty for us compared to our 80 sq ft apt kitchen with 1930s stove. Our concepts to go the architect soon so he can earn his keep.

