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Atelier

Atelier Kitchen Suite with Fluted Stone Breakfast Alcove

An Atelier kitchen module with a fluted stone breakfast alcove, champagne-toned tall storage, and desert oak shelving.

Published Reviewed

Collection
Atelier
Space
Kitchen
Specifications
6

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Fadior Atelier Kitchen Suite with Fluted Stone Breakfast Alcove — 304 stainless steel kitchen system, front view
Hero viewKitchen
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.

Overview

About this piece

The full design intent, materials, and how this system is built — in detail.

Fluted Stone Breakfast Alcove is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time for homes that need a full Atelier kitchen, a polished breakfast perch, and closed storage in one commerce-ready module. The layout centers on a fluted stone alcove built into the island end, so the owner can sit for coffee or a quick meal without turning the kitchen into a separate dining room.

The differentiator is the breakfast alcove itself. Existing Atelier products already cover a bar cabinet, a floating pantry wall, an ipe courtyard breakfast wall, a modular culinary wall, and a worktop bridge prep niche. This SKU is different because the breakfast function is carved into a fluted stone island face rather than treated as shelving, pantry storage, a courtyard-facing table, or a bridge zone above the worktop.

The commercial purpose is direct: give the buyer a kitchen that can host daily breakfast and still read as a calm architectural object. The fluted alcove softens the island mass, the counter remains clear for prep, and the surrounding tall units stay closed so food storage, cookware, and small appliances do not dominate the first view.

For designers, the named product turns a broad request for a luxury breakfast kitchen into a quotable scope. The brief can specify Atelier, Kitchen, Fluted Stone Breakfast Alcove, a full prep island, closed tall storage, desert oak open shelving, champagne-toned vertical units, and formula dimensions. That gives the homeowner, designer, factory team, and installer one shared object to review.

The visible palette is deliberately luminous. Calacatta cream stone gives the island a continuous surface, champagne-toned tall units bring a warm vertical rhythm, and desert oak shelving keeps the wall from feeling like a sealed appliance bank. The fluted stone face adds shadow and texture without opening drawers, exposing mechanisms, or making the product visually busy.

Fadior specifies the cabinet body around 304 stainless steel construction, then resolves exterior finish, appliance clearances, stone thickness, shelf depth, reveal alignment, wiring routes, plumbing positions, delivery segmentation, and site tolerances through project drawings. The public concept is calacatta cream, champagne brass, desert oak, honeyed limestone, and pure ivory, but final proportions are confirmed by measurement and sample approval.

Daily use should be checked as a sequence. The owner should be able to prep at the island, sit at the alcove, reach the sink, move around stools, open adjacent cabinet runs, clean the fluted face, and reset the surface quickly after breakfast. If that sequence is easy, the product remains useful after the first visual impression.

This SKU works well in high-rise apartments, villas, serviced residences, and open-plan homes where the kitchen is visible from the living area. A freestanding breakfast table may crowd the room, while a plain island can feel too transactional. The alcove gives the kitchen a more social edge without breaking the closed exterior discipline.

Finish approval matters because the composition depends on quiet precision. The stone veining should be reviewed across the island face, the fluting depth should be checked under both daylight and evening lighting, and the champagne-toned units should sit warmly beside the oak shelving rather than turning brassy. Samples should be approved before production so the final kitchen feels composed from every angle.

The formula inputs are transparent: 4.2 meters of base cabinet planning, 2.1 meters of wall cabinet planning, 2.4 meters of tall cabinet planning, and 3.1 meters of countertop planning. The publisher computes the USD price from those meter values. This copy does not invent a price, discount, package total, or promotion.

Before production, Fadior reviews wall straightness, window position, ceiling height, appliance sizes, sink location, countertop overhang, stool clearance, floor level, delivery access, elevator limits, stair turns, and installation sequencing. If the island or tall wall must be split for transport, the visible stone rhythm and panel divisions should absorb those breaks cleanly.

The cabinet-body decision is separate from the visible mood. Fadior uses 304 stainless steel as the construction basis for durability and alignment, while the exterior can carry stone, warm champagne tone, and oak softness that suit the residence. This separation lets buyers pursue a luminous kitchen look without giving up structural discipline.

For procurement teams, the named SKU makes comparison easier. Instead of asking for a general marble island kitchen, the request can refer to an Atelier Kitchen Suite with Fluted Stone Breakfast Alcove, including closed storage, formula dimensions, production posture, finish direction, and merchant-feed object in one place.

The final review should rehearse daily movement in order: food prep, breakfast seating, sink access, appliance reach, stool pullback, cabinet opening, surface cleaning, night lighting, and sightlines from the living area. This keeps the product elegant while confirming the alcove does not block the working kitchen.

Because the alcove is built into the island, the room can support informal meals without adding visual noise. This matters for international buyers who want a premium kitchen, an easy hosting reset, and a breakfast position that looks intentional from the entry, dining area, or terrace threshold.

For project teams, this SKU also creates a better conversation about cost and logistics. The meter inputs define the commerce object, while the named differentiator defines the design intent. That separation helps designers revise appliance choices, stool count, shelf layout, and stone samples without losing the procurement identity of the product page, quotation, packing plan, and installation checklist.

Cleaning and long-term care should stay part of the early review. Fluted stone faces need practical wipe access, stool legs need enough clearance, and high-touch breakfast ledges should avoid fragile edges. Fadior reviews these details before manufacturing so the product remains useful after daily coffee, family breakfast, and guest service.

The shop page is therefore a practical decision record as much as a visual concept. It names the series, category, differentiator, dimensions, production posture, buyer-use case, and final-review sequence in one place, giving homeowners and project teams a stable reference before they request a measured quotation.

Lighting should be designed with the alcove rather than added later. The breakfast face needs soft vertical definition, the island top needs clear work light, and the tall storage wall should avoid glare across champagne-toned surfaces. A controlled warm route, confirmed against the real windows, protects both the product photograph and daily comfort.

Storage interiors should be drawn around real kitchen habits instead of assumed. Breakfast ware, tea service, chargers, small appliances, trays, and cleaning tools each need different depths and access patterns. Fadior can keep the exterior calm while dividing the interior for practical use, but those decisions should be approved before the production drawing is released.

The owner should also confirm stool count, knee clearance, and whether the alcove serves quick meals, laptop work, or guest conversation during cooking. That choice affects counter overhang, stone support, lighting height, and nearby storage. Keeping the decision inside the named SKU prevents the kitchen from drifting into a vague custom-island request.

Product imagery shown is design rendering; final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture. The rendered visualization is used to communicate the intended exterior composition, while measured drawings, samples, and site checks determine the manufactured result.

The result is a shop-ready kitchen object for buyers who want breakfast seating without clutter. Atelier provides the catalog series, the Fluted Stone Breakfast Alcove names the distinct design move, and the closed exterior keeps the kitchen composed enough for repeated daily use.

Fadior Atelier Kitchen Suite with Fluted Stone Breakfast Alcove — interior room context showing cabinet integration
Interior perspective01
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.

Visual interpretation

How this product reads at room scale

See how the product holds its design language at room scale and in close detail.

The visual direction is a luminous Gulf villa kitchen with a full stone island, champagne-toned tall units, desert oak shelving, and a fluted breakfast alcove carved into the island end. The product should read as a finished exterior kitchen composition: closed fronts, continuous stone planes, warm vertical storage, and a breakfast ledge that looks integrated rather than added afterward.

The intended mood is polished but practical. Calacatta cream, honeyed limestone, pure ivory, champagne tone, and desert oak should make the kitchen feel bright and architectural while the fluted face gives the island enough texture for close product photography.

Key features

Designed as a system, not decoration

These points explain why this flagship product stands out.

  • Fluted breakfast alcove

    A textured island-end perch supports quick meals without adding a separate breakfast table.

  • Closed storage wall

    Tall units keep cookware, pantry items, and appliances out of the first visual read.

  • Luminous finish direction

    Calacatta cream stone, champagne-toned fronts, and desert oak shelving create a warm high-rise kitchen mood.

  • Measured project workflow

    Final dimensions, sample approvals, delivery splits, and installation sequencing are confirmed before production.

Materials and finish

Material choices that support the design language.

Finish, color, and detailing are selected to keep the product convincing in both specification and daily use.

Surface finishes

  • book-matched calacatta cream stone
  • champagne PVD tall-unit finish
  • desert oak open shelving
  • honeyed limestone breakfast ledge
  • pure ivory fluted stone face

Color options

Calacatta cream#F1E8D6
Champagne brass#C9A35E
Desert oak#8B6F44
Honeyed limestone#D9C49C
Pure ivory#FFFFFF
Fadior Atelier Kitchen Suite with Fluted Stone Breakfast Alcove — close-up of stainless steel finish and hardware detail
Finish and detail02
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.
Fadior Atelier Kitchen Suite with Fluted Stone Breakfast Alcove — lifestyle setting with natural light and residential
Adaptation study03
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.

Customization

Adapting this product for your home

This is where the product moves from inspiration into a live project discussion.

Fadior can adjust island length, alcove width, stool clearance, tall-unit rhythm, appliance placement, shelving depth, lighting route, stone edge profile, and delivery segmentation after the project team confirms site measurements. The Fluted Stone Breakfast Alcove remains the named design move while the final production drawings adapt it to the buyer’s room and workflow.

Finish samples should be reviewed for stone veining, champagne tone, oak color, and fluting depth before production. These approvals keep the product faithful to the shop-page direction while allowing the manufactured kitchen to fit local lighting, floor finish, appliance package, and installation conditions.

Specifications

Technical specifications

The key data is organized for clear review before planning and quotation.

SeriesAtelier
CategoryKitchen
DifferentiatorFluted Stone Breakfast Alcove
ProductionMade to order in Foshan, China with approximately 30-day lead time
Module dimensions4.2 m base, 2.1 m wall, 2.4 m tall, 3.1 m countertop
Commerce taxonomyGoogle product category 635; Kitchen modules > Island suite > Breakfast alcove

Quick facts

Verifiable facts, at a glance.

Material standards, hardware ratings, and construction methods you can cite or verify before you specify.

Quick reference facts about this Fadior product.
ClaimValueStandardContext
Series bindingAtelierSanity catalogSeries comes from the live Sanity catalog.
Category bindingKitchenSanity catalogCategory was selected by the shared daily plan fallback after Wardrobe, Bath_and_Vanity, and Living_Room were already published today.
DifferentiatorFluted Stone Breakfast AlcoveSlug contractDistinct from Atelier products focused on bar cabinet, pantry wall, courtyard breakfast wall, modular culinary wall, and worktop bridge prep niche.
Slugatelier-fluted-stone-breakfast-alcove-in-atelierShop SKU namingFollows series-differentiator-in-series shape.
Commerce taxonomyGoogle product category 635 and internal product type Kitchen modules > Island suite > Breakfast alcove.Google Merchant CenterUsed by the publisher for feed eligibility.
Formula dimensions4.2 m base, 2.1 m wall, 2.4 m tall, 3.1 m countertop.Shop pricing inputThe publisher computes price from these inputs; no manual price is written.
Production basis304 stainless steel cabinet body.Fadior product standardExterior finish is resolved by project sample approval.
Primary useA fluted stone breakfast alcove built into a full prep island so a compact dining moment sits beside closed kitchen storage.Kitchen planningBest for apartments and villas that need a polished breakfast perch without adding a separate dining table.
Visual directionGulf Villa Marble Luminous for Kitchen.Image style rotationUses book-matched calacatta-marble kitchen, champagne PVD tall units, and desert oak open shelving in all image briefs.
Image disclosureProduct imagery shown is design rendering; final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.Merchant transparencyThe public page discloses that the images are rendered visualization assets.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

These questions help buyers compare options and reduce friction before inquiry.

What makes the Fluted Stone Breakfast Alcove different from other Atelier kitchens?+

It builds the breakfast function into a fluted stone island face instead of treating seating as a loose table, shelf, or pantry extension. Existing Atelier products already cover bar cabinet, pantry wall, courtyard breakfast wall, modular culinary wall, and worktop bridge prep niche directions, so this SKU focuses on a compact island-end meal perch with closed storage and a clear prep surface.

How is this shop SKU produced and delivered?+

The module is made to order in Fadior’s Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time after measurements, finish samples, and production drawings are confirmed. Delivery planning then follows the approved packing and installation sequence for the project site, including island segmentation, tall-unit protection, stone handling, elevator limits, and installation access checks. The goal is to keep the online scope, factory package, and site crew working from one confirmed reference.

Does the page show the exact manufactured kitchen?+

Product imagery shown is design rendering; final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture. The rendered visualization explains the intended exterior composition, while final production depends on approved drawings, site measurements, material samples, appliance choices, counter support, stool clearance, and local installation conditions confirmed before manufacturing begins. Buyers should treat the page as direction, then rely on the measured order package for final decisions.

What should a designer confirm before ordering this kitchen module?+

The designer should confirm stool count, knee clearance, appliance sizes, sink position, countertop overhang, stone edge detail, shelf depth, lighting route, delivery access, and the way the island splits for transport. These checks protect daily use and installation accuracy while keeping the fluted breakfast alcove aligned with the kitchen workflow and room proportions. It also helps prevent late changes that would disrupt pricing, packing, or stone fabrication.

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