Luxury kitchen with a continuous ceramic island
A continuous ceramic surface wraps the island, turns the corner, and keeps going across the back wall and coffee corner. The material reads as one line rather than separate parts, which is what gives the room its calm. Against the darker cabinetry wall, the lighter ceramic surface stands out immediately, while the marble-like countertop adds a finer veining pattern across the working zone.
Keramik that wraps the island
The island is the clearest gesture in the room. Its ceramic cladding starts on top and runs down the sides without a visible break, so the block feels wrapped rather than assembled. That move repeats in the surrounding surfaces, where the same material appears in the splashback and the coffee corner. The result is a kitchen that relies on long, continuous planes instead of separate accents, with the luxury kitchen island as the visual anchor.
Seen from across the room, the island has a firm outline and a pale, stone-like presence. The marbled surface catches light differently from the darker cabinet fronts nearby, which keeps the layout from feeling flat. The countertop edge is crisp, but the veining softens the overall reading. It is a restrained contrast, built from material rather than decoration, and that is what holds the space together.
Dark cabinetry and integrated cooling
Along one side, the dark kitchen cabinetry wall pulls the appliances into a single band. The built-in wine cooler is set into that wall rather than standing apart from it, and a second custom wine cooler is integrated in the same way. Both units are finished to match the cabinet colour, so the eye reads the wall as a quiet surface with selected openings instead of a row of separate machines.
That same approach is visible at the sockets and at the join between cabinetry and worktop. Small elements disappear into the larger composition, which makes the room feel less fragmented. The darker fronts give the kitchen depth, while the glazed appliance doors introduce a few reflective points without breaking the pace of the wall. It is a direct, controlled way of handling a busy kitchen programme.
A built-in wine cooler, set into the line
The built-in wine cooler does more than store bottles. It sits at the right height within the cabinet wall, so the function is legible without interrupting the rhythm of the fronts. Because the unit is sprayed in the same colour as the surrounding joinery, it does not pull attention away from the island. Instead, it confirms the kitchen’s preference for alignment, concealed edges, and measured transitions between material zones.
The coffee corner continues the same language
The ceramic coffee corner carries the same surface vocabulary into a smaller zone. Rather than switching to another finish, the material continues there and keeps the wall treatment consistent with the island and splashback. That continuity matters because it gives the room a sense of direction: from preparation area to coffee point to cabinet wall, everything is tied together by surface and proportion rather than ornament.
Lighting reinforces that reading. A ceiling track lighting system runs over the working area, with several spots aimed down onto the island and adjoining surfaces. The light is practical, but it also draws attention to the material shifts: the pale ceramic, the darker fronts, the reflective glass on the appliances, and the glossy places where the worktop catches the room. Nothing is overlit. The fixtures simply trace the main work zones.
Light, track, and working zone
The ceiling rail gives the room a clear line above the kitchen, almost like a visual counterpoint to the horizontal worktop below it. Because the spots are grouped over the preparation area, the island becomes the brightest part of the plan. That helps the marble-like countertop and the ceramic wrap read in detail, especially where the veining meets the side panels and the edges turn around the volume.
From construction to finish, kept in one hand
The project was handled as a complete process, including electrical work, plastering, and tiling. That level of coordination shows in the finish, where junctions are kept tight and surface changes are controlled. In a kitchen with custom elements, those decisions matter. The ceramic wrap, the cabinet colouring, and the built-in appliances only work together because the details are settled before the room is completed, not after.
The final impression is not about excess. It comes from the way the island, wall units, and coffee corner share one material vocabulary, while the darker cabinetry wall gives the room weight. The kitchen feels measured, with a clear centre and very little visual noise. The luxury kitchen island is the starting point, but the real effect comes from everything that is aligned around it: the continuous ceramic wall, the integrated wine cooler, and the steady line of light above the worktop.
Look closely and the room becomes less about single statement pieces than about the spaces between them. The ceramic turns the corner, the appliance fronts sit flush, and the worktop reflects a little of the light from above. Those small moves shape the atmosphere more than any decorative gesture could. It is a kitchen built from precision in materials, with the island carrying the weight of the composition and the surrounding surfaces keeping it in check.
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