Why does the material you choose for your kitchen change how the whole room feels?

Some renovations begin by knocking down walls. Others begin by choosing the right material.

In this apartment near El Retiro, the transformation began with the layout. Like many homes built in the 1970s, the apartment had a very compartmentalized organization: narrow rooms connected by hallways and a single bathroom.

What the house did have in its favor was light. All the rooms opened onto a large exterior facade, allowing natural light to easily enter the interior.

The renovation began with that premise. The floor plan was opened up, the unnecessary partitions were removed, and the space began to breathe. What remained was a spacious, tranquil interior, built with few materials but chosen with great care.

The first to appear, and the one that organizes everything else, is the kitchen.

First, decide what role the material will play

Before choosing a finish, there is a more important question: What do I need this material to do in the room?

In an open-plan space, every element plays a role. Some materials act as a neutral background, allowing other elements to stand out. Others act as accents, introducing contrast without dominating. And still others anchor the space, giving the room a clear focal point around which everything else is organized.

In many open-plan spaces, the kitchen often takes on the role of anchor. It's the element with the most volume and remains visible from almost any point in the room.

If the material you choose is too neutral, the space may feel pleasant but lack focus.

A material with warmth and texture, like wood or any finish with visual depth, has the ability to provide that point of reference. Not because it's flashy, but because it offers something concrete to draw the eye to.

In an apartment near Retiro Park, for example, the walnut cabinet fronts do exactly that. From any point in the space, the kitchen draws the eye. Not because of its size, but because of the visual weight of the material.

Before deciding on a finish, ask yourself this question:
If someone enters my living room, where do I want their gaze to go first?

The answer usually indicates what role the kitchen needs to play and what material can fulfill it.

When you combine two materials with character, it simplifies everything else.

One of the most common mistakes when designing an open kitchen is trying to balance two strong materials by adding more elements: more textures, more details, more layers. The result is usually an overcrowded space.

When two dominant materials share a space, wood and concrete, wood and stone, wood and metal, what makes them work together is not the decoration that surrounds them, but the absence of it.

If you choose a wood front with visible grain, you don't need to add moldings or details that compete with the material. The finish already has enough character.

What it needs around it are clean lines, clear shapes, and surfaces that don't compete for attention. The simpler the design surrounding a powerful material, the more balanced the room feels.

This also applies to proportions. A well-sized kitchen, one that fits the room rather than filling it completely, works better with other strong materials.

Restraint in volume and restraint in design help materials that could compete to feel balanced.

What changes when you think about the material like that

Choosing your kitchen materials with the entire room in mind doesn't complicate the decision. It clarifies it.

Instead of asking yourself, "Which facade do I like best?", you ask yourself, "What does this space need, and what material can provide it?" This quickly narrows down the options. And it almost always leads to safer choices, not because they're the most conservative, but because they're designed for the actual space you'll be living in, not for some isolated image.

A well-chosen material doesn't stand out on its own. It makes everything around it feel more polished.

And in an open-plan layout, that's noticeable every time you walk through the front door.