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A 1970s condo transformed by a kitchen makeover

Style, storage, functionality and a stellar view: what more can a homeowner ask from a kitchen makeover?

Designed and built by Potvin Construction, a new modern-themed penthouse kitchen in a 1970s-era condo in The Glebe met all those expectations and then some.

“The old one was just a galley kitchen,” says the homeowner, who prefers to remain anonymous. “The cabinets were very high quality, but they were dated and just not my style … I was looking to go modern; country style is not my look.”

“I wanted more light,” she adds. “I’d just moved from a big house and the kitchen here felt enclosed. Also, it wasn’t as functional as I would have liked.”

To top it off, the old design included a solid wall partially separating the kitchen and general living area, limiting the potentially stunning view of the neighbourhood and beyond.

With that wall now replaced by an island, “I can see Parliament Hill when I’m working at the island… It’s wonderful. I’m aware of the sky now, the clouds. Now nature is part of my day. I look down and can see the (Rideau) Canal. At night, it’s just magical.”

Having decided to make the investment (“I thought, ‘I’m moving in here for the long term, so I want it to be something I’m comfortable with’”), the homeowner rounded up inspirational photos, including some of the renovated suite on the floor below hers, and checked out a couple of kitchen designers. She ended up working with Pierre Dromaguet, Potvin’s millwork design and sales manager, who designed her new space.

“I told Pierre I wanted a Zen kitchen and dark cupboards,” she recalls. “He picked it up from there.”

The new kitchen is bright and open with a mix of dark and light colours.
Photo: Gordon King Photography

Simple ingredients and a tribute to original architecture

Unlike today’s bright, open, entertainment-ready spaces, Dromaguet says, “Kitchens in the 1970s weren’t ‘happening’ places. It was that tucked-away room that no one paid attention to.”

The new one, by contrast, is integrated into the overall living area, giving the condo a greater expansiveness and cohesion.

Being a condo, there was limited room for the makeover, although the new useable space is roughly double the size of what was previously there. Dromaguet kept to a clean design and simple ingredients, including a mix of black and walnut slab doors and panels as well as light, textured countertops made of Dekton, a durable, manmade porcelain product that is increasingly popular.

“It’s not a big space. The more textures, the more colours you have, you lose the essence of what it is quickly,” explains Dromaguet. “If your space is small, keep the lines to a minimum, keep the volumes to a minimum, keep the colours to a minimum or it gets busy quickly.”

In the case of this kitchen, he continues, “… the black is a backdrop, the wood becomes a feature and the Dekton is what tied everything together.”

Concealed appliances help maintain the visual cohesion and relaxed, uncluttered esthetic.

Along with the Zen-like vibe and visual connection with the outside world, the new kitchen includes triple the storage space of the old one, built-in cabinetry lighting, a new peninsula with cupboards underneath, and a wine fridge and bar. The project was a finalist in the 2024 Housing Design Awards, a high-end annual affair organized by the Greater Ottawa Home Builders’ Association.

Dromaguet pushed the project a step further when he incorporated the rich walnut slabs as an echo of the wood panelling in the building’s lobby and elsewhere.

“In a project like that, I value the architecture of the building itself. We need to pay homage to what it is… We wanted to give it a feel of the 1970s although still being contemporary.”

The kitchen, says Dromaguet, has integrity. “It’s something that’s going to age well because it’s already got a little bit of the flair of the 1970s but it’s clean, it’s streamlined. And the efficiency — in a small space, you’ll find a lot of efficiency in there.”

A new west-end showroom showcases Potvin’s identity

When the homeowner — who was so tickled with Dromaguet’s kitchen that she brought him back to design her walk-in closet — contracted with Potvin, the long-running family business had only its original showroom in Rockland.

That changed this summer when the family business opened a shiny new, 4,500-square-foot space at 155 Colonnade Rd. to showcase their work.

With more than 15 vignettes, including five showcase kitchens along with mudrooms, closets, bathroom vanities and more, the new space has something for everyone, says Josée Aupry, showroom co-ordinator for the west-end spot.

Each kitchen, for example, “has its own unique flavour,” she says. If a visitor responds positively to the large, blue-and-white country-style kitchen display and not to one of the sleeker modern spaces, then the Potvin design team has a good starting point for the design process.

“People are visual and go by emotion and (their reactions) can guide the conversation.”

Visitors to the new showroom, which features a welcoming living room vignette complete with fireplace as its entryway, come primarily from the west and south ends of the city and beyond, she notes. With much of the area’s homebuilding occurring in areas like Kanata, Stittsville, Barrhaven and outlying communities such as Carleton Place, the showroom has clearly been designed to serve a growing client base.

That accords well with Potvin’s goal of building its retail business to complement its traditional focus on serving homebuilders. It does that in part, according to Aupry, by having a showroom focused on the individual.

“You’re taken care of from the get-go. You’re not just one of many.”

The new showroom, adds Dromaguet, marks Potvin’s continuing evolution.

“It really captures who we are.”

About the Author

Patrick Langston All Things Home Ottawa homes

Patrick Langston

Patrick Langston is the co-founder of All Things Home Inc. and a veteran journalist. He has written widely about the Ottawa housing industry since 2008.

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