Alpine Kitchen: The Suncadia Table
A mountain retreat kitchen built around a quartzite island and the way this family actually cooks.
The brief for this kitchen started with a single truth: the family cooks for crowds here. Not casual weekends — full cooking sessions with multiple people at the island, wine open, kids around. That meant the design had to work as hard as the people using it. The quartzite island gave them the central workspace they needed. The Wolf range gave them the control. And the layout gave everyone a place without getting in each other’s way.
The palette came out of the landscape. Dark cabinetry that reads against the snow and firs outside, warm gold hardware that doesn’t fight the mountain light, and stone that ages with the house rather than against it. Every choice had to survive the way vacation homes actually get used — hard and often.








Built for How They Cook
The island is where this kitchen lives. A quartzite slab wide enough for prep, plating, and gathering — chosen because it’s harder than marble and honest about its marks in a way that a vacation home requires. You’re not babying this stone. It works.
Everything routes back to the island. The Wolf range is positioned so the cook faces the room. The refrigerator pulls. The storage is immediate. This isn’t a kitchen designed for a magazine — it was designed to run.
The Work Begins With One Conversation
We hold a limited number of consultations each month and are selective about the projects we take on. If you’re ready to discuss yours, we’d like to hear about it.
The Challenge: Warmth Without Weight
Mountain kitchens often tip heavy — dark, cave-like, cut off from the landscape they’re supposed to celebrate. The challenge here was getting the warmth of the palette — dark cabinetry, quartzite, wood — without losing the airiness that makes a mountain retreat feel like space, not shelter.
Pendant lighting over the island does a lot of work. The ceiling height gets used rather than lost. The window placement pulls the landscape in. And the gold hardware threads warmth through the space without competing with the views beyond.





“This kitchen was designed for the way they actually cook — loud, crowded, and seriously.”
How We Solved It
The stone came first. Once the quartzite was chosen — a hard, stable variety that reads naturally against mountain materials — the rest of the palette fell into sequence. Dark cabinetry needs something to warm it. Gold does that. Chrome would have felt industrial. Brass would have felt period. Gold threads through without announcing itself.
Wolf appliances were the functional anchor. For a vacation home kitchen that hosts serious cooking sessions, the dual-fuel range gives you a gas burner with an electric oven — the combination that professional cooks prefer because each fuel type does something the other can’t.
The dining table extends the island logic — positioned so the kitchen and dining space flow together rather than compartmentalize. When fifteen people are in this house, the kitchen doesn’t close.








Frequently Asked
The work in this portfolio is the standard we hold ourselves to on every project — not just the celebrated ones. We take on a limited number of engagements each year, which means the projects we commit to receive our full attention from the first conversation through the final installation. If you're considering a renovation, a new build, or a full redesign, tell us about your home. We'll tell you honestly whether we're the right fit — and what working together would look like.
Your home should stop you. Every time you walk in.
