How To Get the Perfect Kitchen for Your Wisconsin Lake House

We have customers on lakes throughout northern and central Wisconsin who have created amazing spaces for gathering with family and friends. Their love of the open water is common to all of them, and bringing that serene feeling inside is central to their design mission.

Open-Concept Elegance

Open-concept kitchens, with their bright, airy vibes, are great for bridging the outside with the inside while providing a multifunctional and interesting space.

Last year, one of our customers did a major reconstruction on an 80s-style Lake DuBay home by replacing everything that got in the way of creating a soothing coastal retreat. Interior walls came down, and woodwork went from stale brown oak to fresh mission white. They wanted light to flow freely throughout the living room and kitchen without any limitations.

Open Concept Kitchen

Clear Glass

Another way to eliminate visual barriers is to add glass inserts in doors and cabinet frames for unobstructed views. Pantries with glass doors, or even lightly frosted glass, seemingly tie the separate area to the kitchen. Glass inserts around entire upper cabinet boxes and doors lighten spaces and offer soft transitions to the next workspace or room.

Versatile White Cabinetry

White cabinets are the surest way to freshen a room and add light. Bright white nicely complements coastal, traditional, cottage, and farmhouse looks, while off-white and antiqued white work well in rustic settings. One Northwoods customer chose stained wormy maple cabinets for her Adirondack-style kitchen and strategically placed a distressed ivory island in the center of the workspace. The simplicity of mission style and flat panel doors fit nicely with most décor.

 

Rustic Kitchen Island
Big Bold Islands

If you like being part of the action while cooking and conversing, islands are among the kitchen essentials. The size, of course, is relative to available space, but as of late, bigger seems to be better. Two of our Lake DuBay customers added impressive islands to gain massive workspace, an extra sink, seating and storage. Being that they could work from several angles and still see outside also made islands the right choice. Both loved the clean and classic look of marble so they opted for the beauty and low maintenance of Cambria quartz countertops. Yet, rustic settings that like to reflect a little wear and tear do well with reclaimed wood tops, butcher blocks and unpolished stone.

Kitchen Island
Decorative Range Hoods

Range hoods also reflect what’s happening in the room. If you want to weave nature throughout the kitchen, bring in raw elements. Our Lake DuBay customer loved the natural simplicity of reclaimed wood, so she accented the range hood with it and coordinated wooden plank open shelving on a corner wall. Hammered metal, copper, barn wood and stone range hoods are good choices for rustic settings.

Kitchen Range Hood

Spacious Farmhouse Sinks

Whether stainless steel or porcelain, apron sinks are deeper and wider than traditional kitchen sinks and for homeowners who love to entertain, that’s a big plus. Washing large pots and pans after the summer barbeque bash is easier. And if you’d rather let dishes pile up than turn down an after-dinner pontoon ride, this type of sink is for you.

Pops of Color

Green has long been a Northwoods staple. Now, blue is showing up everywhere: in wainscoting, islands, cabinets, backsplashes, you name it. The color has joined the ranks of today’s other popular neutrals, including white, beige and gray. One of our favorite “painted” kitchens is a Lake DuBay gray. The homeowner displayed her flair for contemporary design in sophisticated gray cabinetry with an island that’s almost as attractive as her view of the lake.

Painted Kitchen Hutch
P.S.

The perfect lake house kitchen fits the homeowner’s vision. If it’s a cozy cabin reminiscent of simpler times growing up around grandma’s place, then use elements that help tell your story. Craftsmen like ours at Swita Cabinetry are the key to turning these dream spaces into reality. Call us for an appointment at 715-693-2670.


BY KARLA SWITA

Karla is married to Pete, and they own and operate Swita Cabinetry together.


 

Related Posts