
1/6
Good News: This Kitchen Cabinet Trend Is Also Insanely Affordable
While high-end finishes like dramatic blue marble, solid brass backsplashes, white oak floors, and expensive French range hoods are often aspirational for dream kitchens, budget-conscious renovators often seek more affordable alternatives. A recent design trend, the use of painted or stained plywood for kitchen cabinets and other built-in solutions, offers a stylish and economical option. This material, previously highlighted as a burgeoning trend, is gaining traction due to its versatility and ease of integration into various design aesthetics.
Giancarlo Valle, a Brooklyn-based designer, was an early adopter of this trend, utilizing untreated and stained plywood for clever built-in solutions in his DUMBO apartment. Since then, the design world has embraced diverse applications of this hardware store staple. For those looking to fully immerse themselves in this trend, SMS Arquitectos’s “plywood house” in Palma de Mallorca demonstrates the material's adaptability, appearing in its natural state, stained, or painted to complement different rooms and moods, such as moss green cabinets and walls in the kitchen.
For a softer yet edgy approach, interior architect Dries Otten’s Brussels kitchen incorporates mint-hued plywood cabinets alongside an American walnut and terrazzo island, creating a fresh, elevated look. Plywood also proves to be an excellent base for IKEA hacks, as showcased by Reform, a brand that customizes IKEA kitchens. Their designs feature mint green cabinets with milled-in handles set against a large plywood pegboard backsplash, offering a custom feel at an accessible price point.
Achieving a monochrome aesthetic is also possible with plywood, as seen in a blue-hued space by Lissoni Associati Architecture. Here, plywood-stained panels and doors in muted navy and indigo shades form a minimalist backdrop, suitable for kitchen cabinets or storage walls. For those who embrace graphic elements, Hotel Henriette in Paris uses simple plywood walls and bookcases in guest rooms, enhanced with deep indigo painted graphic shapes, proving that bold statements don’t require expensive wall coverings.
The Scandinavian simplicity trend also finds its match in plywood. A Swedish kitchen by Förstberg Ling contrasts pale untreated plywood with dramatic black-stained cabinets made from the same material, completed with simple white ceramic tiles and a bold black wall. Eclectic tastes are satisfied by Dries Otten’s Rotterdam kitchen, which blends untreated plywood with painted cabinets and shelves in a vibrant array of colors like poppy, marigold, rose, duck egg, and avocado, some featuring delicate pegboard details. Finally, for a trend-driven look with lasting appeal, a Bed-Stuy loft by New Affiliates combines untreated plywood with green lacquered kitchen cabinets and bright copper pipes, creating a clean, light, and unpretentious space complemented by open shelving and colorful glassware.
#KitchenCabinetTrends #AffordableDesign #PlywoodInDesign #BudgetRenovation #InteriorDesign #KitchenDesign #HomeRenovation #DIYDesign #SustainableMaterials #KitchenCabinetTrends #AffordableDesign #PlywoodInDesign #BudgetRenovation #InteriorDesign #KitchenDesign #HomeRenovation #DIYDesign #SustainableMaterials
0 comment in total
No comments yetYou may also like
































































