Transforming my kitchen into a walk-in wardrobe might sound crazy, but as you can see above, my windowless eighties kitchen was destined for new life. I reused bits from the old kitchen and moved it to the back of the living room to make the most of the biggest room in my flat.
Sourcing inspiration and materials took me from my mum’s shed to New York where the sketching started. This is my photo diary.
Sketching my kitchen at The Butcher’s Daughter a.k.a the vegetable slaughter house of New York City.
Running around Manhattan, I might as well have been wearing nothing but a fig leaf in the lack of layers I packed for a New York winter. I finally made it to reclaimed renovation heaven The Demolition Depot. Doors, windows, shutters, sanitaryware, stone, irreplaceable artefacts and cats, lots of cats.
I didn’t go as ornate as this radiator, but my drop-in at Demolition Depot confirmed my preference for black. Fun rad fact: matt black is one of the best choices for radiant heat (the kind that heats bodies). Can you tell I’m now obsessed with any tricks to keep myself warm…
Remember when I found a Belfast sink sitting in my mum’s back garden? Well, this time I almost took this wooden sink surround. I should add, my mum is also in the middle of a renovation, she doesn’t normally store salvage in her shed. However, I decided my worktop needed to be one long strip of something to avoid overcrowding the small kitchen with too many materials. That one stays with you ma.
SalvoWEB had me seeing salvage from London’s Kings Cross station and I chose the glazed 1940s staff noticeboard above to fashion as my overhead kitchen cabinets. I had been eyeing-up vintage English Rose kitchens, but this design decision put me on a different train towards Historische Bauelemente where I found these gymnasium floorboards (circa 1910) salvaged from a school near Berlin. These will be the doors for my old kitchen carcasses.
Organ pipes from The Architectural Forum salvaged from a church in East London were transformed into a decorative extractor fan pipe for the Arts and Crafts fireplace from Haes that I styled as my cooker hood and splashback. And breathe. My most ambitious use of salvage so far…
I will be back with the big (small) reclaimed kitchen reveal soon.