Have you ever walked into a beautiful home and notice—rather than its style and aesthetic —its finer elements? Some details have the power to immediately draw curiosity and render a dull space more unique. From rare heirloom décor pieces to unusual shades for your furnishings, interesting elements create their own story in any room.
However, the real treat goes beyond décor: a remarkable architectural detail that stands out from the usual, at the very heart of your home, elevates the space bringing your kitchen to a whole new level.
As for a kitchen design, whether we’re discussing large awe-inspiring maximalist details that immediately catch the eye or the most minute design only visible at a closer and expert look, every interesting architectural detail is always special.
These days, we have our heart set on the grand kitchen arch design.
What is a Kitchen Arch Design?
Dating all the way back to the 2nd millennium BC in Mesopotamian, the brick arch design can be found across the globe in numerous cultures and surviving all ages until modern days. Probably the most famous arches were built by the Romans, mainly adopted for the structural sturdiness, allowing Romans to construct bigger buildings, longer roads and better aqueducts. The arch became the very first ancestor of modern architecture.
Nowadays, prominent arches are the perfect tourism-magnet all over the world: like the Arc de Triomphe in Paris or the Rajasthani doorways in their opulent palaces with carved notches and skilled inlay work.
However, a kitchen arch design can serve several purposes, both structural and aesthetical. A kitchen arch design can act as a dramatic front door, a carved out in-built shelving unit or a cosy little breakfast nook frame. A kitchen arch can also be a stylish nod to the past, while also serving the practical purpose of connecting rooms in a charming and distinctive way.
The Use of a Kitchen Arch Design
Be it a modern, contemporary designed home or an ancestral property with timeless style, an arch or archway works as a structural element in a building to span a gap while adding support to the walls and ceiling. In fact, the stress or load from the top of the wall or ceiling is borne by the top of the archway, which is then transferred and pushed downwards on its two sides, rendering the whole wall more stable.
If you have an open entry point into a kitchen, or have removed the door to create more space, consider softening the edges with a kitchen arch design. An arch can also be chosen as the perfect method to open up a wall to add more space to a room while also saving the beams and support on top: a wide archway prevents the overall area from looking too empty or unbalanced.