Buitenpracht

Custom outdoor kitchen with canopy, natural stone worktop and wood slat screens

A run of light catches the underside of the canopy before it reaches the natural stone worktop. The custom outdoor kitchen is set up as a compact bar zone, with vertical wood slats to one side and a brick wall behind it. The layout is shaped by the ground beneath it: the kitchen and the stools sit at different heights, so the line of the counter changes as the terrace steps through the space.

Custom outdoor kitchen as a spatial starting point

The material choice was made so the kitchen can stay outside all year. That intention is visible in the way the surfaces are detailed and in the calm, enclosed feel created by the canopy above. Warm light runs beneath the cover and along the front of the unit, tracing the length of the cooking area at night. The result is less about display and more about keeping the work surface readable when daylight fades.

Instead of treating the kitchen as a single block, the design breaks it into clear parts. The counter stretches across a natural stone plane, while the darker kitchen fronts sit beneath it in a straight line. The stone carries visible veining and small shifts in tone, so the surface does more than reflect light. It gives the bar zone a firm horizontal edge and makes the cooking side easy to read from the terrace.

Wood slats and brick set the backdrop

Vertical wood slats frame one side of the outdoor kitchen and work as a screen rather than a closed wall. Their narrow rhythm softens the hard edges of the stone and brick, but they also keep the composition open. Through the gaps, the brick background wall stays visible. That layer of materials gives the project depth without adding visual noise. The slats repeat in several views, so the screen reads as part of the kitchen area itself, not as a separate element.

The brickwork behind the bar adds a rougher texture to the setting. Against that surface, the smooth worktop and the clean joints of the kitchen fronts look sharper. The contrast is modest, but it is what gives the space its structure. In the close-up images, the meeting point between stone, wood, and masonry becomes the main subject, with each material doing a different job.

A natural stone worktop with clear edges

The natural stone worktop is the most legible material in the project. Its surface shows veins, flecks, and subtle shifts between lighter and darker areas. Those variations matter because the bar zone is not large. The stone stretches the eye across the whole set-up and gives the outdoor kitchen a single continuous plane to gather around. The edges are crisp, and the junctions around the built-in elements are kept tight. Custom outdoor kitchen remains connected to the layout, materials and daily use of the home.

Seen in detail, the top also helps explain how the kitchen is used. A high spout tap appears against the work wall, and a round cooking module is set into the stone in another view. These are small insertions, but they sit neatly within the larger slab. The stone holds the visual weight of the project, while the equipment stays secondary and low-key.

Lighting that follows the structure

Warm lighting under the canopy does more than brighten the worktop. It follows the geometry of the kitchen and outlines the lower edge of the front. In the evening views, the light reads as a thin line rather than a feature in itself, which keeps the composition calm. It also makes the changes in height easier to understand, especially where the bar section lifts away from the cooking zone. The illumination sits close to the surfaces, so it reveals texture instead of washing it out.

Different seating heights shaped by the ground work

The terrace level changes across the installation, and the bar zone answers that directly. The bar stools are set at one height while the kitchen element sits at another, creating a stepped arrangement across the same footprint. That difference is not hidden. It becomes part of the layout and gives the seating area a clear relation to the cooking side. The project shows how a custom outdoor kitchen can adapt to uneven ground without forcing a flat, uniform platform.

From the front, the row of bar stools lines up with the counter edge and gives the composition a social focus. The stools are tall, dark, and closely spaced, so they reinforce the horizontal run of the kitchen rather than competing with it. The space around them remains open, with paved surface and gravel strip visible at the edge of the terrace. Those ground details make the whole setting feel anchored rather than floated above the garden.

A collaboration visible in the details

The project is presented as a collaboration between two parties, and that cooperation shows in the way the elements are resolved. The stone, the slatted screen, and the kitchen unit are aligned with care, but the page avoids overexplaining the process. What matters here is the result: a bar zone, a work surface, and a sheltered cooking line that all follow the same measured logic. The kitchen reads as one composition, even though it negotiates different heights and multiple materials.

Across the images, the strongest views are not the widest ones but the closer cuts: the edge of the stone, the underside of the canopy, the alignment of the light, and the slats beside the bar. Together they show a custom outdoor kitchen that is built for use, shaped by the ground, and finished with materials that can stay outside through the seasons. The details are restrained, but they carry the whole project.

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