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How your kitchen is
designed can either facilitate kitchen activities, or
create congestion and "traffic jams".
The Architecture Department at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign was founded
in 1944 with the goal of improving the state of the
art in home building. It was there that the idea of
the kitchen work triangle was developed.
A
kitchen has three main functions: storage,
preparation, and cooking. The places for these functions
should be arranged in the kitchen in such a way that
work at one place does not interfere with work at another
place; that the distance between these places is not
unnecessarily large; and such that no obstacles are
in the way. A natural arrangement is a triangle, with
the refrigerator, the sink/cabinets, and the stove at
each corner of the triange.
The kitchen triangle has become
universally recognized as providing an optimum layout.
Four basic kitchen designs have resulted from this observation.
• The first of these is based on a
single-file kitchen. This is not an optimum design,
but may be required by the available space, for example
in a studio apartment. A single-file kitchen has everything
along one wall. The sink and cabinets, stove and refrigerator.
Access involves walking up and down the aisle.
By expanding slightly to create a
double-file kitchen, the triangle principle can be used.
A double file kitchen has cabinates along both walls.
One wall has the sink and stove, the other wall has
the refrigerator. This is a a very common design and
is also known as the classical work kitchen.
• In the L-kitchen, the cabinets occupy
two adjacent walls. Again, the work triangle is preserved,
and there may even be space for an additional table
at a third wall, provided it doesn't intersect the triangle.
• Another typical work kitchen as
the U-kitchen. It has cabinets along three walls. The
sink is typically located at the base of the "U",
withthesink on one side and the stove on the other.
At times, if the kitchen is large enough, a table may
be included at the fourth wall.
• The fourth option is the block kitchen.
This type of kitchen uses an open design and is usually
called an island kitchen. The stove or both the stove
and the sink are placed where an L or U kitchen would
have a table, in a freestanding "island",
separated from the other cabinets. In a closed room,
this doesn't make much sense, but in an open kitchen,
it makes the stove
accessible from all sides such that two persons can
cook together, and allows for contact with guests or
the rest of the family, since the cook doesn't face
the wall anymore.
More Than For Cooking
Current home designs include kitchens
with enough informal space to allow for people to eat
in it without having to use the formal dining room.
Such areas are called "breakfast areas", "breakfast
nooks" or "breakfast bars" if the space
is integrated into a kitchen counter. Kitchens with
enough space to eat in are sometimes called "eat-in
kitchens".
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