Integrated induction cooktop with downdraft extraction in the glass
The glass surface reads as one clean plane at first glance. Then the dark extraction opening becomes visible, set into the cooktop rather than added beside it. In this integrated induction cooktop with extractor in glass, the cooking zone and the ventilation point share the same surface, which suits the open, minimal kitchen shown in the images. The worktop stays visually calm, with the cooktop sitting flush and the steel pan anchored against the light stone around it.
Cooktop and extractor in one surface
The core idea is direct: the extractor is built into the glass of the hob itself. That makes the appliance read differently from a separate hood or a wall-mounted solution. Here, the cooking zone is not interrupted by overhead equipment, so the eye moves across the worktop without a break. The glass extraction grille sits low in the surface, giving the whole composition a compact, grounded look. This cooktop and extractor in one is meant for kitchens where the plan stays open and the visual field needs to remain clear.
The flush-mounted induction cooktop follows the line of the worktop precisely. There is no raised edge to catch light or mark the boundary between appliance and counter. That detail matters in the wider view, where the kitchen fronts, pale surround and stone top already create a restrained setting. The integrated induction cooktop with extractor in glass keeps the technical part of cooking close to the surface, while the surrounding materials remain simple and legible.
A shallow build with flexible discharge options
One of the practical advantages described in the source text is the low depth of the unit. That thinner build makes the appliance easier to place in a run of cabinetry and leaves more room underneath for storage. In the image set, the worktop looks uninterrupted from front to back, with no bulky housing drawing attention below. Flexible discharge solutions are mentioned as part of the design, which points to an installation approach that can adapt to different kitchen layouts without changing the visual calm of the surface above.
The shallow profile also helps the cooktop sit neatly within the stone or composite top. From the room, what you notice is the flatness of the plane, the dark square of the glass, and the small, precise cut-outs where air is taken in. The result is less about making a statement than about reducing clutter. The integrated induction cooktop with extractor in glass lets the worktop do most of the visual work, while the ventilation stays present but controlled.
How ZoneFlex responds to the pan
ZoneFlex is the feature that changes how the cooking surface behaves. Instead of fixed hot spots that ask the pan to fit the appliance, the system detects the cookware and adjusts the induction zone to the pot’s size and shape. In simple terms, the cooking area follows the pan. That is particularly useful on a surface like this, where the glass field stays open and the cooking position can shift without breaking the composition of the kitchen.
The images reinforce that idea by placing a steel pan directly on the hob, with the extraction area nearby rather than overhead. The cooktop does not need a tall hood to frame it. Steam can rise from the pan and be drawn toward the dark grille in the glass, as shown in the visualisation image. It is a quiet piece of kitchen technology, but the way it works is easy to read once the surface details are visible.
Visible details in the glass
Close up, the extract opening is the part that gives the cooktop its character. The dark inset contrasts with the surrounding glass and makes the ventilation zone legible without overdescribing it. A steel pan, a pale worktop edge and the reflective cook surface create a small set of materials, each with a distinct role. The glass extraction grille sits at the meeting point of those materials, and that is where the eye lands.
In the wider images, the same area appears almost monolithic. The cooktop reads as a single block embedded in the counter, with the extraction channel disappearing into the surface rather than hovering above it. That visual restraint is important in an open kitchen, where every appliance sits within the same field of view. The integrated induction cooktop with extractor in glass holds that field together by keeping the technical parts low and the lines straight.
Built for open kitchens that stay visually clear
The project makes most sense in the context of an open kitchen with minimal interruption above the worktop. Without a hanging hood, the wall line stays open and the space above the cooking area feels less crowded. The images show a pale, understated setting where the cooktop becomes a dark insert within a broader plane of stone and light cabinetry. That contrast is deliberate. It lets the appliance read clearly while keeping the room itself uncluttered.
There is also a practical side to that clarity. Cooking vapours are extracted directly at the surface, so the source of steam is addressed where it appears. The source text says that grease particles and unpleasant odours are kept from spreading, but the page should be read as a product description rather than a promise. What is visible is the direct route from pan to grille, and that immediate path is what gives the system its appeal.
What the photographs emphasise
The photo set alternates between overview and detail. One view shows the integrated induction cooktop with extractor in glass within the larger kitchen composition; another moves in on the dark vent channel and the edge of the glass opening. A third frame catches vapour hovering above the extraction area, making the airflow legible without diagrams or labels. These images keep the page grounded in what can actually be seen: the flush fit, the inset grille, the steel pan and the calm run of the worktop.
That sequence matters because it explains the product through scale. From a distance, the appliance disappears into the kitchen layout. Up close, the glass extraction grille and the cut-out in the surface show where the engineering sits. The integrated induction cooktop with extractor in glass works on both levels at once, which is why the page can speak in design language without losing sight of the technical function underneath.
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