05/23/2026
From a boxed-in kitchen → wide open to the Gran Salón. 🍽️✨
Designer:
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The before was a struggle. The kitchen was tucked away like a secret nobody asked for. You couldn’t talk to guests while cooking. You couldn’t watch the kids. You felt separated from the very heart of the home.
Meanwhile, the Gran Salón sat there beautiful, spacious, but completely disconnected from the cooking and conversation.
So we knocked down the wall. Not for drama. For flow.
What changed:
🥘 Kitchen side:
→ Island now faces the salon (not a wall)
→ Prep sink + main sink so you’re never stuck in one spot
→ Induction cooktop on the island, cook while hosting
→ Hidden pantry around the corner. Clutter stays out. Function stays in.
🛋️ Gran Salón side:
→ The visual line from stove → island → sofa is completely unobstructed
→ Lighting zones: bright over the island, warm and low over the seating area
→ You can now chop vegetables and still be fully part of the conversation
The result?
A flujo armonioso. The kitchen doesn’t fight the salon. It dances with it.
Guests sit at the island. Music plays. Someone’s making coffee. Someone’s reading by the window. Everyone’s together but nobody’s in the way.
We didn’t just open a floor plan. We opened the way people move, talk, and live.
Three keys to this kind of flow:
One continuous floor – No transitions = no mental stops
Proportional zones – Kitchen has breathing room, salon keeps its coziness
A clear axis – Stand at the stove. You should see the far window of the salon. That’s your harmony line.
From closed-off and awkward → open and armonioso.
This kitchen no longer hides. It hosts.
Would you trade upper cabinets for a full view of your living space? 👇
HomeRenovation IndoorOutdoorLiving KitchenDesign