Design Buy Build Issue 44 2020 | Page 53

Fisher & Paykel calls this “The Social Kitchen” philosophy and it remains at the forefront of the trends influencing modern interior design and construction. As an appliance innovator, it is our role to continue our active collaboration with housebuilders to ensure our products continue to meet their needs as well as those of our customers. The notion of the Social Kitchen underpins our design philosophy in developing flexible appliances that can be distributed throughout the kitchen and tailored to individual lifestyle needs. The key to the social kitchen is understanding patterns of use – here, we engage and interact with family and friends at parties; we do homework and spend time on our hobbies. Considered kitchens reflect this in their layout – from the efficient single person space using the work triangle to distributed appliances in work zones that allow family and friends to prepare and share a meal together. Often the design of modern homes does not allow space for separate hobbies or workshop rooms – we see the kitchen as a place for everyone to experiment, be creative and perhaps go from being a novice to an expert in baking or a new style of cooking. This can create a sense of wellbeing and satisfaction; our role is to work in the background and to provide discrete technologies without technology overload, but also have the sophistication to provide the perfect cooking result for both the novice and the expert. To successfully create this social hub, it’s important to open up the kitchen design and to move the appliances out into places that allow work zones for more than one person. This means that a friend or partner can pick up a knife and chop some vegetables or stir the sauce – creating a shared experience. Today’s kitchen needs to be able to respond to these needs through modular distribution and exceptional functionality. Curating a collection of kitchen appliances that can adapt to the physical, architectural, sociological and psychological changes that are occurring in today’s and tomorrow’s kitchens can only be done by working closely with specifiers who are responsible for bringing these spaces to life. www.fisherpaykel.com/uk 53