Park Slope Parlor Floor Kitchen Reno
Today we hear from the Dumbo-based Vadya Stoltz Architects about a kitchen renovation they designed in a Park Slope brownstone. If you’re an architect and have a project that you think would interest readers, please shoot us an email. This grand brownstone in Park Slope is not landmarked but nonetheless has many original details still…

Today we hear from the Dumbo-based Vadya Stoltz Architects about a kitchen renovation they designed in a Park Slope brownstone. If you’re an architect and have a project that you think would interest readers, please shoot us an email.
This grand brownstone in Park Slope is not landmarked but nonetheless has many original details still intact. The Owners approached us for an extensive renovation but with sensitive solutions to accommodate modern conveniences. We decided with the Owners to give up a carefully defined amount of historic detail for an updated space meeting the needs of a four-person family. Specifically on the parlor floor, we had an arch and pantry closet configuration common at the rear of period brownstone parlor floors. Many people jam in a substandard kitchen and live with a freestanding refrigerator on the other side of the room in order to maintain the character of the room. In our case, we decided to start over in the room but design with the original character in mind. The niche is gone and replaced with a full bank of double wall cabinets and integrated appliances. A large island allows for additional storage and we carefully saved the original door mouldings to reuse them on a new large center double door opening out to a new deck. Click on the photos above to see larger versions.
(more text plus construction photos on the jump)
(As a technical detail of note since I have seen these mistakes over and over again, we were fortunate to be renovating the basement floor below and were careful to reinforce the floor with walls below. Whenever possible, it is best to carry these loads down all the way to the cellar foundation. Even experienced builders see continuous floor joists and assume they are sufficient to carry the loads. This may be true, but cracked finishes are sure to happen with a heavy island and in worse cases, severely bowed floors are common sometimes permeating throughout the building.)
In the end, the result is a lighter parlor floor with a continuous flow of family common spaces. With the modern family increasingly desiring a continuous kitchen/family room space, the architectural challenge is to retain the quality of these spaces while respecting the original design intents of the 19th century brownstone archetype.
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yip, new2hood…thats always the way it is. I’d rather have a formal dining room + the island and also just eat at the coffee table in front of the TV.
I used to have an island w/stools right next to my dining room table, and 9 times out of 10, everyone would end up sitting at the island.
Beautiful kitchen. Personally, i like uninterrupted counter space, and dont like how the sink breaks up the island counter. But its still great. I also dont see the value of island seating. I know many who have it, yet dont use it. They all end up at the table.
Beautifully done!
I particularly like that they didn’t use white painted cabinets on the island.
Red Knobs … BRG and DIBS will be happy. 🙂
I love the double doors also.Reusing the original moldings makes this kitchen look so much better than most I’ve seen.
I agree, bkny. I never understand making space for seating at an island when the dining table is right there next to it. I’d rather have extra storage instead.
Really nice kitchen. But I find the big steel pendant lamps to be metallic overkill with the appliances. Bit dated too, having lots of steel.
Lovely kitchen, it looks like about fourteen other kitchens we have seen before, very nice.
Does the zoning in park slope mandate those ceiling light fixture in every upper middle class kitchen? Just wondering.