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  Photography by Lark Smotherman

Feature: The Collaborative Kitchen

Amy Hsuan

September 1, 2005


Designer Mikal Otten grew up in a Minneapolis household as one of 13 children, and says his favorite memories always took place in the kitchen—where Christmas dinners and evening board games reigned. “Everyone was always in the kitchen,” Otten says. “It’s the hearth of a home.” Now a kitchen designer at the Denver showroom of Wm Ohs, a manufacturer of high-end kitchen cabinetry, Otten strives to infuse a bit of his childhood’s warmth into even his most contemporary designs. The results are a perfect mix of function and luxury. Otten’s work on the kitchen in Mark Adcock and Debra Toney’s home in Denver’s upscale Hilltop neighborhood exemplifies his signature style.


Designer Mikal Otten integrated Dornbracht faucets and Wm Ohs cabinetry in quartersawn white oak into the kitchen of his clients’ Denver home. (Click image to enlarge.)

Toney, owner of Debra Toney Residential Design & Development, and Adcock, an architect with the firm, worked with Otten to achieve a contemporary and clean space with traditional accents that complement the exterior of their 1941 Tudor home. Toney, who frequently hosts large soirees, wanted a kitchen that would also accommodate their growing family—with room to spare. “We were looking for something contemporary with a traditional heart,” she says.


White Carrara marble countertops are artfully juxtaposed with an 8-foot-long custom stainless steel hood. (Click image to enlarge.)

The open floor plan of the 8,000-square-foot home lends the kitchen an airy feeling. The 360-square-foot kitchen, with its 10-foot ceilings, flows seamlessly into the family room and outdoor entertaining area, revolving around an enormous island topped with white Carrara marble and fitted with a built-in cooktop by Wolf Range. Suspended over the mammoth 13-foot-long countertop is a custom 8-foot stainless steel hood made by Colorado Custom Stainless, which adds some drama to the space. “We were going for something that would make your mouth drop,” says Otten, who also notes that the hood’s design was inspired by his many trips to Italy.

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