ELEMENTS - March 2008
By Joshua Bodwell
Photography Darren Setlow
Styling Tamara Savage
Kitchen Islands at the Heart of the Home's Heart
A
large, wooden
table was once a common fixture in the kitchens of our forebears. The tables
provided much-needed room to spread out ingredients and cookware, and it was a
gathering place within the warm thrum of kitchen activity. These well-worn
tables were the precursors of today’s ubiquitous kitchen island, which may just
be the defining
feature of modern kitchens.
Pamela
Shangraw-Murdough of Kennebunk Kitchens and Baths loves how islands “redirect kitchen
traffic” and separate those who are cooking or cleaning from those who are
eating or gabbing. According to Shangraw-Murdough,
space is often the most important consideration when selecting an appropriate
design. An island, she says, must remain proportional to the size of the
kitchen: too big, and there’s no clearance; too small, and there’s no space to
prep, cook, or eat.
Once the size has been
determined, Shangraw-Murdough
often outfits her islands by first seeing what she can or cannot place in other
areas of the kitchen. Some decisions are easier than others; if there is no
window with an outside view, she says, the decision to put the sink in the
island is an easy one.
In addition to the
essentials, such as stools and extra space for storage, Shangraw-Murdough says
kitchen islands are often best suited for smaller, under-the-counter appliances
like microwaves, warming draws, or wine refrigerators.
For Todd McIntosh of
McIntosh & Tuttle Cabinetmakers, designing and building kitchen islands
combines two passions. “I love cooking,” he says. “If I’m not in the woodshop,
I’m in the kitchen.”

When it comes to selecting
hardware for kitchen-island cabinetry, McIntosh offers pragmatic advice: “Keep
it simple.” He usually steers people away from “gimmicky hardware with too many
moving parts.” While the flashier hardware might be interesting to look at,
McIntosh notes, it often has a shorter life-span than something simpler.
When it comes to kitchen
islands, McIntosh also suggests letting the natural wood shine. Since kitchens
are such high-traffic areas, he says, painted islands are easily scuffed and
marred. Square corners are another feature best avoided: “I try to use rounded
or chamfered corners, or even columns. People just don’t move at right angles,
so having some rounded parts can be important.”
When deciding what material
to use atop your island, Morningstar Marble & Granite owner Nick Whatley
makes a case for stone. “The longevity of it goes beyond anything any of us can
imagine,” he says. Whatley also mentions a few key things to keep in mind when
searching for the perfect piece of stone.

Though stone is a strong
and stable material, Whatley warns that marble or granite should overhang the
island by no more than ten inches without adding supporting features such as
brackets or legs. “I like people to understand how this fact will figure into
the design and everyday use of their island,” says Whatley. He also warns that
large or heavy kitchen islands may require floors to be reinforced from below.
“If you have cabinetry, a range-top, and granite, you could be talking 700
pounds in the middle of a room,” he says.
Beyond its longevity and
practicality, Whatley also loves stone simply for its beauty. “A granite- or
marble-topped island can be like a painting,” he says. “The size really gives
stone a chance to shine.”
And who doesn’t want their kitchen island to shine—from layout to hardware to countertop—like a work of art?



