Millennial Kitchens are For Looking and Not Cooking

1920s Small Duplex Kitchen Hollywood

1920s Small Duplex Kitchen, Hollywood

Kitchens, even in apartments, were an important room in the old days.  Prior to the 1950s, apartments had large kitchen with space for a breakfast table (see above picture).

After 1940s and on, kitchen were relegated to galleys with maybe a pass thru eating bar.  But the kitchen was still large enough to prepare the Thanksgiving dinner (see pictures below).

1960 Galley Kitchen

1960 Galley Kitchen

 

1960s Apartment Kitchen With Pass Thru

1960s Apartment Kitchen With Pass Thru

Now developers are again shrinking the apartment kitchen further. Kitchens are are no longer hidden in a separate room or a galley but front and center in the great room.  Many millennials no longer cook meals but bring home takeout, throw something into the microwave or toaster over, or eat out.  The kitchen’s have been reduced to grand coffee bars.  Kitchens must look better than before.  Kitchen are showpieces with contemporary cabinets, quartz countertops, and stainless steel appliances (see pictures below).

 

2013 Renovated Kitchen of the Above 1920 Duplex Kitchen

2013 PMI/Adaptive Kitchen in the  1920 renovated Hollywood Duplex above

2014 Renovated Apartment Kitchen

2014 PMI/Adaptive Renovated Apartment Kitchen, Echo Park

2013-04-03 19.14.37Kitchen In New Stella Apartments, Marina Del Rey

New Icis Apartments Glendale

New Icis Apartments Glendale

New Eleve Lofts Glendale

New Eleve Lofts Glendale

Bellevue Lofts Echo Park

Bellevue Lofts Echo Park

New Wilshire Vermont Apartments, Koreatown

New Wilshire Vermont Apartments, Koreatown

Kitchen in the hallway at Luxe on 4th Street, Santa Monica

Kitchen in the hallway at Luxe on 4th Street, Santa Monica

 

7950 Sunset, West Hollywood

7950 Sunset, West Hollywood

Station House  San Francisco

Station House
San Francisco

Avalon Apartments, San Francisco

Avalon Apartments, San Francisco

Creative Multifamily

PMI, one of the pioneers of creative office, is now focusing its attention on “creative multifamily” properties.  This undertaking targets gentrifying urban areas, focusing on neighborhoods that are near public transit and local amenities (bars, restaurants, shopping, etc.).  By utilizing many of the architectural elements popular in our creative office product, PMI renovates obsolete properties into hip, modern apartments that appeal to Gen Y, knowledge workers, the creative class, and urbanites; hence, the “creative multifamily.”

lofts2The goals of creative multifamily renovation include:

  • Highlight structural building elements wherever possible.  This may involve any of the following: removing drywall ceilings and exposing the natural wood ceilings to achieve volume, restoring the original wood floors or removing carpet to polish concrete slabs, and cutting new windows and sliding doors.
  • Reconfigure and improve the floor plan, layout, and circulation to meet the needs and lifestyles of the Gen Y knowledge worker.  This reconfiguration may combine living, dining, and kitchen into one large room that encourages collaboration.  Kitchens are opened up and dining bars are employed to create a café atmosphere.  Bedrooms are enlarged to efficient sizes.  Interiors are made to feel modern while maintaining the architectural character of the original structure.
  • Create new, centrally located common area patios with tables, chairs, and barbeques in a hotel roof club atmosphere.  This recognizes the collaborative and social nature of the Gen Y knowledge worker.
  • Modernize the bathrooms with contemporary cabinets but maintain the tiles in character with the buildings.  Kitchens have contemporary cabinets and counters with new stainless steel appliances.
  • Recognize the new green initiatives by installing insulation, double pane windows, and skylights.
  • Create indoor/outdoor living by making private outdoor spaces accessed through large interior door openings.
  • Equip units with new HVAC split systems and a washing machine and dryer.

Like their desire for a different office environment, this generation’s knowledge workers desire a different, more relevant and expressive apartment environment with affordable rents.  Creative multifamily provides a more expressive and design oriented dwelling for the young creative knowledge worker.  This resonates with their hip and collaborative nature and will satisfy their desire to live in an urban property that is “not their father’s first apartment.”

PMI Launches PMI Creative Multifamily

PMI has launched its new company to acquire, renovate, and convert multi-family properties into creative housing spaces.  PMI will utilize many of the techniques and skills in its creative office division and apply them to apartment living to create new and different rental housing experiences for urban dwellers.  PMI already has projects under way in Echo Park, Silver Lake, and Hollywood, California.

The Growth of Kitchens and the Death of Formal Dining in New Urban Housing for Gen Y

In new mutlifamily urban housing in Los Angeles, developers are building bigger kitchens and leaving out formal dining rooms.  In other words, the kitchen, dining room, and living room are morphing into one large room.

The new Archstone Apartments in Venice (Los Angeles, California), feature knockout open kitchens. The kitchen forms the center piece of one great room for living, dining, and food preparation.  A breakfast bar area provides the only place in the apartment for sit down dining.

One bedroom apartments featuring this 1,000 square foot floor plan start at $4,000– a hefty price to pay for the changing layout of urban living.  With the evolution of Gen Y’s preferences regarding living spaces, separate rooms for entertaining, dining, and living are no longer needed.  PMI will feature these designs in their new, creative multifamily projects.

Photo courtesy of Archstone Apartments