Bob Bakes Of Bakes & Kropp Shares His Approach To Designing Luxury Kitchens - 27 East

Residence

Residence / 1792270

Bob Bakes Of Bakes & Kropp Shares His Approach To Designing Luxury Kitchens

icon 10 Photos
A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

Kitchen designed by Bakes & Kropp in collaboration with Diane Guariglia of Dyfari Interiors. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

Kitchen designed by Bakes & Kropp in collaboration with Diane Guariglia of Dyfari Interiors. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

Kitchen designed by Bakes & Kropp in collaboration with Diane Guariglia of Dyfari Interiors. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

Kitchen designed by Bakes & Kropp in collaboration with Diane Guariglia of Dyfari Interiors. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

Kitchen designed by Bakes & Kropp in collaboration with Diane Guariglia of Dyfari Interiors. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

Kitchen designed by Bakes & Kropp in collaboration with Diane Guariglia of Dyfari Interiors. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

A Bakes & Kropp kitchen. COURTESY BAKES & KROPP

Oliver Peterson on Jun 22, 2021

Of all the rooms in a fine Hamptons home, or any home, really, a kitchen requires the most forethought. The space has to meet each homeowner’s unique set of needs and desires, and without expert advice and guidance, best-laid plans are almost sure to go awry. Experienced luxury kitchen designer Bob Bakes of Bakes & Kropp, which has New York City and Long Island showrooms, including one on Noyac Road in Sag Harbor, offers his tips for merging form and function to create a kitchen that will satisfy even the most discerning homeowner.

Mr. Bakes is well known for his aesthetically sophisticated yet warm and comfortable kitchen designs, but before considering style, he says it’s vital to establish exactly how the space will be used. “The primary part of our design method is to get the flow and the movement right in the kitchen,” he says. “That’s controlled fundamentally by the action stations.”

While kitchens of the past focused on a simple “working triangle” — sink/prep, storage and cooking — Mr. Bakes says modern high-end spaces must consider the growing needs of an increasingly savvy clientele. “Now you’ve got secondary dishwashers and secondary sinks, coffee makers, secondary cooking positions, so there’s a lot more that goes into a kitchen,” he adds, noting that multifunction areas now appear consistently.

Additionally, Mr. Bakes says one must build in room to accommodate friends and family who gather to gab and sip while the primary resident preps their meal.

“Particularly if you’re out in the Hamptons, you’re never going to see a kitchen that doesn’t have some kind of significant seating area or congregation area,” he explains, but the most important part is function. “We make sure logistically the project is going to work, that it’s going to flow properly, that the movement areas are going to work,” he points out. And only after those questions are answered does he look at exactly how he’s going to paint that picture. “It’s a multistage process.”

For example, a good designer will ensure movement is always flowing in the right direction so the chef can maneuver smoothly from station to station, grabbing cold and dry goods from their areas, prepping them in another area and then bringing the food to an oven or range unhindered. “You don’t really want people moving around where there’s a bunch of hot stuff other than the person who’s actually doing the work there,” Mr. Bakes says. “We create more open passageways where we want traffic to go and slightly closed trafficways where we don’t want so much traffic to go,” he continues. “It’s all too often that standardization takes over. You need to adjust according to the space you’ve got because almost without question, the space will be different in every kitchen we do.”

Part of designing that space and flow is identifying the would-be chef’s likes and dislikes. “Are you a big cook? Do you need a 60-inch range? A 48-inch range? A 36-inch range?,” Mr. Bakes asks. “Are you OK with having the ovens underneath the range or do you want them in a tower? What refrigeration do you need? Do you need a lot of it?” He runs down a long list of other specifications, such as storage volume, appliances, burner configurations, wine refrigeration, steam ovens, warming drawers, and on and on. Once all that is established, it’s time to discuss colors, materials and finishes. “We can create any visual they want,” he says.

The look is indeed subjective, but there are reasons why some designs work visually and others don’t.

“The thing that switches people on to what we do, we seem to have come up with a textural balance. … People say, ‘I’m not sure what I like about it, but I really love it,’” Mr. Bakes muses. “I’ve gone down this path of relatively neutral colors in our color palette, which we blend in subtle ways within a kitchen. We create balance,” he explains, describing Bakes & Kropp’s signature look combining subtle colors and textures, and usually a lovely bit of lighting chosen by the homeowner, for an impactful whole. “If a wood shop got hold of a copy of my plans, they could probably build a kitchen, because a wood shop is a wood shop,” he says. “But get a wood shop to design a kitchen, and they’re completely lost.”

Mr. Bakes notes that Bakes & Kropp has a trendsetting style, including waterfall countertops, often with drawers cut into the sides; mixed-material surfaces; and statement kitchen islands. “Those kinds of details send a message to people’s brain, that it looks right,” he adds.

He also acknowledges that his clients are more educated than ever when it comes to creating their dream kitchens. “We’re still the inspirational designers that I hope we’ve always been, but we’re also now becoming guides where people have got a lot more insight themselves into the specifics of what they want,” he says. “Give me all the pieces of the jigsaw puzzle, and then I’ll translate that into your piece.”

You May Also Like:

Spring Is the Time To Pot Up Houseplants

In spring our gardening attention logically and naturally focuses on things going on outside. We ... 25 Apr 2024 by Andrew Messinger

The April Ramble

April got off to a typical start. For most of the first two weeks of ... 18 Apr 2024 by Andrew Messinger

AIA Peconic Presents 2024 Design Awards

AIA Peconic, the East End’s chapter of the American Institute of Architects, recognized outstanding design, ... 15 Apr 2024 by Brendan J. O’Reilly

A Complicated Task – The Renovation and Addition to Temple Adas Israel

For any architect, the renovation and addition to a temple like Adas Israel would be ... by Anne Surchin, R.A.

Plant Radishes Now

As you may have discovered from last week’s column there is more to a radish ... 11 Apr 2024 by Andrew Messinger

In Praise of Trees

“The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The next best time ... 9 Apr 2024 by Marissa Bridge

PSEG Reminds Customers To Call 811 Before Digging

As National Safe Digging Month begins, PSEG Long Island reminds customers, contractors and excavators that the law requires them to call 811 before digging to ensure underground pipelines, conduits, wires and cables are properly marked out. Striking an underground electrical line can cause serious injury and outages, resulting in repair costs and fines, PSEG stated in an announcement this week. Every digging project, even a small project like planting a tree or building a deck, requires a call to 811. The call is free and the mark-out service is free. The call must be made whether the job is being ... by Staff Writer

Capturing the Artistry of Landscape Architecture

Pink and white petals are unfolding from their fuzzy bud scales, hyacinths scent the air ... by Kelly Ann Smith

AIA Peconic To Hold Design Awards Celebration April 13 in East Hampton

AIA Peconic, the East End’s chapter of the American Institute of Architects, will hold its 2024 Daniel J. Rowen Memorial Design Awards celebration on Saturday, April 13, at 6 p.m. at the Ross School Senior Lecture Hall in East Hampton. The work submitted to the Design Awards will be on gallery display. The jurors included Deborah Burke, Joeb Moore and Omar Gandhi, and the special jury adjudicating the Sustainable Architecture Award: Anthony Harrington, Whitney Smith and Rives Taylor. The awards presentation will include remarks by AIA Peconic President Edgar Papazian and a program moderated by past AIA Peconic President Lori ... 4 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

A Brief History of Radishes

The madness will begin. Adventurous souls have had just one day too many of cabinus ... by Andrew Messinger