To identify Jens and Eva’s 1928 home, search for the brick Artwork Deco entry. They describe their place as having “a heat and soul that you simply simply can’t replicate.” However what made them purchase it was its future potential: “We may think about the probabilities of blending the outdated with the brand new to create a home that feels each timeless and up to date.”
The couple stay in Volksdorf, a suburb of Hamburg, Germany, and spent quite a lot of time perusing Instagram and dreaming about new kitchen potentialities: the prevailing setup had been put in within the Nineties and seemed worse for put on. As followers of Vipp’s family designs, together with its iconic 1939 steel pedal bin, Jens and Eva made a pilgrimage to Vipp’s flagship showroom in Copenhagen to see the model’s modular kitchens firsthand.
That’s the place they fell in love with the V3, Vipp’s latest mannequin, confronted in fluted aluminum. “There’s one thing in regards to the refined motion within the panels—it’s modern however not too chilly or industrial,” says Eva. “It’s a stupendous mixture of performance and artistry.”
Working straight with Vipp and Danish model Reform, which equipped the built-in cupboards, Eva and Jens created a cookspace that’s each fascinating and at residence of their historic home. Be a part of us for a glance.
Pictures courtesy of Vipp.


Vipp is a third-generation-owned Danish firm and all of its designs share the identical industrial-chic DNA as its unique product: the steel Pedal Bin (proven right here in stainless-steel). Vipp kitchens are designed as customizable modules that may be mixed in myriad methods and an in-house crew handles installations.