Detail: Bar None

1 MIN READ

For a bachelor client’s 1,100-square-foot pad, Elizabeth Whittaker designed several cool details, like this rolling bar-cum-dining table. “It’s only about 30 inches wide, which is narrow for a dining table, but it works,” says the principal of Boston-based Merge Architects. What it lacks in width the bar makes up for in length: It spans 9 feet.

A steel column anchors the concrete bar as it rolls into place on bright red industrial casters. A reclaimed cedar beam (matching the ceiling rafters) supports the concrete tabletop by linking the column to a solid steel side leg opposite. And a cut-out in the oversized kitchen island accepts the bar as it rolls out of the way and transforms into a raised sitting area.

Whittaker credits the fabricators who worked in close concert to bring her design to fruition: contractor and carpenter Gary Haley of Wakefield, Mass.; metalwork by Studio F Kia in Boston; and concrete by Ray Iocabacci of Rowley, Mass. “Just this one piece involved all of the main trades for the entire project,” she explains.

About the Author

Shelley D. Hutchins

Shelley D. Hutchins, LEED AP, writes about residential construction and design, sustainable building and living, and travel and health-care issues.

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