Virginia Tech Leads in Kitchen Design Education
Blacksburg, VA— As the first of the Baby Boomers gets set to retire this year, kitchen designers have found requests for products and designs suited for this age group increasing. In the current economic climate, more homeowners are seeking to age-in-place, and it will depend on a new generation of kitchen designers to keep them healthy at home.
The professors of the Center for Real Life Kitchen Design at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University unveiled late last year the stunning renovation to their workspace; a combination of kitchens and class space designed to give the kitchen and home designers of the future a hands-on look at the process.
Life at the Center
The Center, in its current incarnation as the locus of Virginia Tech’s residential kitchen design program, formally opened in 1998. Kathleen Parrott, Ph.D., CKE, a professor of housing and 20-year Virginia Tech veteran, is the coordinator of the undergraduate program here at the University, which is accredited by the National Kitchen & Bath Association.
“This is a follow-up to our first renovation in the mid 1990s,” she says. “Our program in kitchen and bath design was growing and we began to ask ourselves, ‘Can we make the space function more broadly for our program?’ At the time, ours was an overtaxed, multifunctional space. While we were able to switch out product rather easily, the layout itself, the cabinetry and other key elements had been in place since the 1960s.”
Parrott cites the Center’s mission as: “[fostering] educational opportunities related to the demonstration and application of products, materials and technologies in residential kitchen and bath design.”
The facility is used for a variety of classes. General design classes have students come in and evaluate how well the spaces work.
“They’re comparing them against the NKBA industry guidelines; they’re looking at the arrangement of spaces; they’re measuring spaces. We actually have them cook here so that they can gauge how much space it takes to do certain activities,” says Parrott.
JoAnn Emmel, Ph.D. teaches residential technology classes in the Center, where students thoroughly investigate and study the equipment. They test everything from how well refrigerators maintain their temperature to how evenly cakes brown in a convection oven.
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