Kitchen of the Week: An Organic Copenhagen Kitchen from Felled Oak Trees
Presenting a non-linear kitchen in an 1891 apartment remodeled by famed architects Lundgaard & Tranberg Arkitekter. Located in Copenhagen’s Nørrebro region, the 170 square meter apartment (about 1,800 square feet) was designed with interiors inspired by Swedish artist Mamma Andersson‘s painting Swan Pond from 2016. The central focus of the kitchen is its undulating cabinetry and worktop besides, an organic shape echoing a pond environment and soft, natural palette to suit. Here’s a closer look at the kitchen and all its details.
Photography by Hampus Berndtson for Lundgaard & Tranberg Architects.

The kitchen cabinetry is designed in oiled Elm from Kongens Nytorv, a central public square park in Copenhagen where, in 1998, the trees were felled due to elm disease. Working with kitchen carpenters Rammelisten, the architects chose to highlight the tree’s annual rings which run vertically from floor to ceiling in the cabinetry and pantry door.








For more favorite Danish kitchens, see our posts:
- Kitchen of the Week: A Two-Toned Design in Denmark
- Kitchen of the Week: An All-Time Favorite Kitchen in Copenhagen
- Kitchen of the Week: The Dinesen and Garde Hvalsøe Kitchen in Aarhus
- Kitchen of the Week: A Sunny-Hued Kitchen in Copenhagen for an Art Director
- Kitchen of the Week: Everything Is Illuminated in a Light-Flooded Kitchen in Copenhagen
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