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Grilled to order: The art of outdoor kitchens

Multifamily Housing

Grilled to order: The art of outdoor kitchens

Seven tips for ensuring outdoor kitchens deliver safe, memorable experiences for residents and guests.


By Mike Plotnick, Contributing Editor | May 29, 2019
Grilled to order: The art of outdoor kitchens

At the 202-unit Niche 905 Apartments, Chicago,  FitzGerald Associates Architects designed an 18th-floor roof deck featuring a large communal grilling station adjacent to smaller individual grills and private dining areas with family-style tables. A nine-foot glass wall running along the perimeter shields residents and their guests from the wind. The glass enclosure “helps the space feel more like a room and makes it more intimate,” said FitzGerald’s Kristen Larkin. Photo: C360 Images, Jim Tschetter

   

A growing appetite for outdoor living spaces is fueling an expansion of outdoor kitchens on roof decks, terraces, and courtyards.

“In the last few years, we’ve seen an enormous increase in demand as high-end rental properties, condos, and townhomes take advantage of the indoor-outdoor living phenomenon,” said Mitch Slater, Founder/President, Danver Stainless Outdoor Kitchens (danver.com).

The design of these open-air amenity spaces has evolved from standalone grill stations to sophisticated meal preparation and dining environments that emphasize convenience and community. “These days, the goal is to get people to stay outside longer and have a great experience,” said Kristen Larkin, ASID, Associate Principal, FitzGerald Associates Architects, Chicago.

Although there’s no standard template for outdoor kitchens, designers and manufacturers we spoke with shared practical advice for ensuring these amenity spaces deliver safe, memorable experiences for residents and guests. 

1. Design a simple, logical layout. L-shape, U-shape, and island layouts are common configurations for outdoor kitchens. Marieke Lacasse, ASLA, LEED AP BD+C, Principal at Seattle-based design firm GGLO, recommends locating them close to the pool area or party room to create a social hub and event space. “Outdoor kitchens are places to congregate around food, so it’s important to provide adequate food prep areas, sink space, and support surfaces,” she said.


 

‘Outdoor living is here to stay, so not having an outdoor kitchen really devalues your asset.’
—Marieke Lacasse, GGLO


 

Larkin likes to engage the management company that will maintain the space early in the design process, to ensure everyone’s goals are aligned. “I want to make sure any decisions I make on their behalf are in the long-term interests of the building owner,” she said. 

2. Provide indoor-outdoor continuity. The growing popularity of sliding glass walls opens the door for outdoor kitchens to function as extensions of the interior environment. “Interior designers need to work closely with landscape architects to achieve design continuity between these areas,” said Jason Valentin, Associate IIDA, Interior Design Coordinator at Stantec.

Team collaboration extends to design details. “Don’t just think programmatically about how the spaces work together, but think also about the overall language of materiality such as patterns, colors, and metals,” said Lacasse. “Every little detail needs to be thought through to create a cohesive indoor-outdoor connection.” 

 

Toni Wendel, Owner of Olde World Builders and Remodelers, chose Danver Stainless Outdoor Kitchens cabinetry with green powder-coat finish for this condo building in New Orleans’s historic Warehouse District. Photo: Chad Chenier Photography

 

3. Select durable, easy-to-maintain materials. “We push for sturdy, stable baseline construction materials,” said Larkin, who favors steel trellises over all-wood structures. She recommends easy-to-maintain surfaces such as stainless steel cabinetry and granite countertops. Powder-coated stainless steel cabinetry offers added protection against moisture damage. Powder coatings can also be colored, opening up design possibilities.

The inevitable spills and splatters from shared grills should be considered when selecting flooring materials. “We’ve learned to use darker pavers in front of barbecue spaces, because grease is more visible on lighter-colored pavers and they stain easily,” said GGLO’s Lacasse.

4. Emphasize safety and accessibility. To protect residents and guests from the potential hazards of open flames and hot surfaces, locate grills, ovens, and fire pit tables in sheltered environments away from high-wind areas—or use a flameless electric grill. All adjacent structures should use fire-resistant building materials, such as fire-treated wood or light-gauge aluminum frame.

Designers also must follow ADA accessibility requirements for kitchens: providing adequate clearance areas and adhering to surface height requirements for sinks, appliances, cabinets, countertops, and food prep areas.  

5. Take local climate into consideration. In colder climates sinks, icemakers, and refrigerators that have outdoor plumbing need to be winterized. “If an outdoor sink isn’t feasible, it’s important to consider adjacencies—how far will a resident have to carry a dirty spatula from the grill to an indoor sink to clean it?” said Larkin.

Humid environments and extreme weather events pose their own problems. “In Miami, we need to specify marine-grade materials such as plywood and cement board as a substrate for the millwork and cabinetry,” said Stantec’s Valentin. “We wouldn’t specify a typical laminate that we might use in an interior space.” 

 

Pappageorge Haymes Partners installed this rooftop outdoor kitchen suite at LUXE on Madison (P II), a four-story, 44-unit apartment community in Chicago’s West Loop.  Fifield Development is the developer. Photo courtesy Pappageorge Haymes Partners

 

6. Use lighting to enhance the ambience. Because nighttime is prime time for grilling, effective lighting is essential for maximizing safety and functionality. Our experts recommend using subtle, indirect lighting strategies that meet local outdoor lighting code requirements while maintaining an ambience conducive to a relaxing night under the stars.

Wind can play havoc with decorative lighting fixtures. FitzGerald’s Larkin suggests using softer bounce lights and integrating the lighting into a trellis or overhead structure to make the space feel more intimate.

7. Offer cooking options. Multifamily developers are expanding their cooking repertoire to include electric cooktops, smokers, and pizza ovens. Manufacturers like Danver offer commercial-grade bartending stations and mobile F&B service carts.

Properties with space or budget constraints can still raise their game. Thor Kitchen (thorkitchen.com) offers a compact modular outdoor kitchen suite that has a gas grill, side burner, wood-burning pizza oven, refrigerator drawers, grill cabinet, sink cabinet, corner cabinet, and appliance cabinet. Danver’s Post and Panel System employs powder-coated stainless steel panels that ship flat and can be installed in the cabinetry even with the countertop in place.

Do outdoor kitchens enhance a property’s marketability? Yes, said GGLO’s Lacasse. “All the best properties have them,” she noted. “The outdoor living trend is definitely here to stay, so not having an outdoor kitchen really devalues your asset.” 

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