The challenge: Janelle and Scott Nivens wanted a lighter, brighter and more open kitchen to comfortably host large groups in their southwest Minneapolis home. They also preferred a more casual eating nook to their formal dining room, adjacent to the kitchen. Two things restricted a new floor plan: a wall between those two rooms and an adjoining, seldom-used screen porch that was in rough shape. Instead of a "too small" kitchen and dining room, they "needed a better functioning" design, Janelle said.
The team: Kari Nelson of K Nelson Architects; Terra Firma Building and Remodeling.
The solution: The wall between the kitchen and dining room was taken down and the porch was removed to make room for a small addition to the kitchen. Putting in a new exterior wall also provided the opportunity to add a bank of windows and sliding doors, making the room lighter and brighter.
"It's kind of a unique circumstance to remove space in order to get better space," Nelson said. "But that was really the best fit for the things they wanted."
New gathering spaces: With the space opened up and square footage added, gathering spaces were created including a kitchen island that seats five. The Nivens also got the informal dining area they wanted with the installation of an eating nook with built-in benches.
Energizing hue: An Otomi quilt that Janelle purchased a few years ago from nearby Zinnia Folk Arts became a centerpiece. After realizing how much Janelle cherished the piece, Nelson had it professionally stretched and framed before it was installed on the wall above the dining nook.
"It was so colorful and hand-embroidered by artists in Mexico. I just loved the story behind it," she said. "When I've tried to do something with it and hang it up myself, it looks like a shower curtain. They embedded it into the wall and really made it into an art installation."
Connected spaces: Custom cabinetry was put in to create continuity and make spaces feel larger. The walnut cabinets are a mix of natural hue with pops of teal.