Three interior walls divide this kitchen from the dining and living room, making the entire first floor seem more enclosed than its actual size. Builder-grade white shaker cabinets, gray quartz counters and subway tile complete the original layout.


Shared on Reddit by u/Due_Pop_4938The couple removed three walls before remodeling the kitchen with rift white oak cabinetry, Taj Mahal quartzite, a large island, large windows and hidden storage. Keeping the original hardwood floors connected the redesigned kitchen to the rest of the home while the open layout completely changed how the space functioned.
The walls came down before anything else


Three interior walls separated the kitchen from the dining room and living room. Removing them created uninterrupted sight lines from the front of the house to the island and to the back yard, allowing the kitchen to become part of the main living space rather than its own closed room.
A floor plan sketch shows how structural walls once blocked circulation around the island. Opening up those sections provides enough width for a significantly larger island while creating a direct connection between the cooking, dining and entertaining areas.
White shaker cabinets define the original kitchen


Tall white Shaker cabinets reached the ceiling and wrapped nearly every wall. Gray quartz countertops, white subway tile, stainless appliances, and black hardware follow the typical builder-grade formula found in early 2000s homes.
Pendant lights above the island offer contrast, but flat cabinet fronts, standard tiles, and multiple upper cabinets give the room a more utilitarian look than later open floor plans.
Rift white oak cabinets replaced builder-grade white shakers


Flat-panel rift white oak cabinetry introduces a consistent wood grain throughout the kitchen, replacing painted Shaker doors with a cleaner, more architectural look. Full-height pantry cabinets frame the kitchen wall while corner open shelves break up solid cabinets and provide space for everyday appliances and display pieces.


Rift white oak extends to the perimeter cabinets, tall pantry units and island, allowing the wood grain to read as one continuous surface. Taj Mahal minimizes visual breaks by wrapping quartzite countertops and backsplashes and limits the palette to oak, stone, plaster and matte black accents.
Quartzite, rift white oak and pot filler define the cooking area


Taj Mahal quartzite extends over the countertops and continues to the back wall of the range, replacing the traditional tiled backsplash with a seamless stone surface. A subtle gray and beige veining softens the surrounding rift white oak cabinetry while a plaster range hood emphasizes natural materials rather than decorative trim.
Matte black fixtures introduce contrast throughout the cooking area. A wall-mounted pot filler sits directly above the range, allowing large pots to be filled without carrying water from the sink, while a matching faucet on the beverage station repeats the same finish throughout the room. Ventilation remains hidden inside the plaster hood, keeping the cooking wall free of exposed stainless steel.
Quartzite leads into the beverage station where it forms both the countertop and backsplash behind the coffee setup and prep sink. Full-height oak cabinetry, a built-in wine refrigerator and additional counter space create a secondary work zone that supports coffee preparation and entertaining without disturbing the activity surrounding the main cooking zone.
An oversized island anchors the open kitchen


The island became a visual and functional centerpiece after the renovation, with seating for two, generous prep space and seamless Taj Mahal quartzite that spans almost the entire length of the kitchen. Clean square edges and integrated storage maintain a restrained design while keeping work surfaces free of visual clutter.
Wide walkways surround each side of the island, allowing direct movement between ranges, sinks, beverage stations and adjacent living spaces without crossing the work zone. Removing the dividing walls created long sight lines on the first floor, making the kitchen feel connected rather than closed off.


The original white shaker cabinets, gray countertops, subway tile and black pendant lights gave way to bursting white oak cabinetry, Taj Mahal quartzite and a plaster range hood. A builder-grade kitchen was transformed into one continuous living space by removing partition walls and extending the same material palette across the expansive layout.
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