Covered outdoor kitchen
The dark stone countertop sets the tone at once. Under the timber canopy, the black modules sit against vertical wood cladding, with a copper tap catching the light above the sink. It is a covered outdoor kitchen that reads as one composed setup rather than a loose arrangement of separate parts, with two duo modules bringing together cooking, prep, and storage in a garden setting that feels deliberately framed.
Wood above, black cabinets below
The canopy is built from timber beams and a wood-lined ceiling, which softens the strong lines of the cabinetry below. That contrast does most of the work here. The black outdoor kitchen elements run straight and low, while the warm wood overhead keeps the space from feeling hard or closed in. Through the opening behind the kitchen, the garden remains visible, so the covered zone still feels connected to the outdoor room around it.
Open shelving and recessed compartments break up the cabinet fronts and make the layout easy to read. The modules do not behave like temporary furniture pieces; they form a fixed outdoor kitchen in the garden with clear zones for cooking and storage. Seen from across the room, the structure feels measured and practical, but the surfaces carry enough visual detail to keep the composition from disappearing into the background.
A dark stone worktop with copper at the center
The worktop is the visual anchor. Its dark stone surface is described as Laurant Dekton, with a finish that is scratch-, UV-, water-, and heat-resistant. The tone is deep and almost mineral, with gold-brown veining running through it. That pattern gives the counter movement without making it busy, and it pairs naturally with the copper sink and tap. Together, the black cabinetry, the dark stone countertop, and the copper sink and tap form the strongest material rhythm in the project.
Look closer and the kitchen becomes more detailed. The sink area sits neatly within the counter line, while the tap rises in a clean copper curve against the darker surface. On a page about a luxury outdoor kitchen, this is the point where the materials do the talking. Nothing is overworked. The contrast comes from the finish of the stone, the reflective metal of the fittings, and the matte depth of the cabinet fronts beneath.
Cooking zones built into the modules
The cooking area is not added as a separate object; it is integrated into the modules themselves. One image shows an open cooking lid, another reveals a grill compartment tucked into a niche, and a third shows the metal framework and shelves inside the storage units. Those details make the outdoor kitchen grill and the storage zones part of the same system. The result is tidy, but not minimal in a sterile sense. There is enough structure to support real use, with enough openness to show how the kitchen is arranged.
That organization matters in a covered outdoor kitchen. The setting protects the working surfaces, but the layout still needs to stay readable when food, tools, and tableware come into play. Here, the open compartments, metal runners, and recessed slots keep the pieces visible and accessible. The black outdoor kitchen modules also give the whole composition a strong horizontal line, which works well beneath the timber roof and against the darker wall behind.
Storage that stays part of the composition
Storage is built into the design rather than added around it. The open niches, shelves, and internal racks turn the lower modules into a working frame for the cooking zone. In one detail, the shelves are stacked in narrow layers of metal, almost like a technical drawing made visible. In another, a deep opening beside the worktop leaves space for equipment while keeping the front of the kitchen clean. These are the parts that make the outdoor kitchen storage feel resolved from the start.
The overall setting remains calm because the materials repeat in clear bands: wood above, dark cabinetry below, stone in the middle, copper at the sink. That sequence keeps the eye moving across the structure instead of stopping at one object. It also gives the covered outdoor kitchen a stronger presence in the garden, especially when the timber ceiling and the black fronts are seen together from a distance.
What the materials do in the light
Light changes the reading of the kitchen throughout the day. On the black cabinet fronts, it stays muted and tight to the surface. On the copper tap, it flashes briefly and then disappears. The stone countertop holds a deeper sheen, especially where the veining cuts through the dark field. Under the canopy, the wood overhead prevents the space from becoming visually flat, while the open edge toward the garden keeps air and view in the composition. This is where the luxury outdoor kitchen earns its clarity: through restrained contrasts, not decoration.
The project shows how a covered outdoor kitchen can be both compact and complete. Two duo modules, a dark stone worktop, integrated grill space, and a copper sink and tap create a layout that is easy to read at a glance. The black outdoor kitchen elements and the timber structure give it a strong frame, while the open storage and cooking compartments make the technical side visible. Nothing here feels improvised. Every surface has a role, and every detail stays within the same visual language.
Photography: Karine de Bruijn
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