The open plan kitchen diner has become a fixture of modern UK living, from rear extensions on Victorian houses to the bright interiors of new builds. Cooking, eating and gathering all happen in one connected space, which makes the room sociable and practical in equal measure. The design challenge is to let the kitchen and dining areas feel distinct while still belonging to the same room.
Good open plan design is really about flow. You want clear zones that read as separate purposes, joined by a consistent thread of colour, material and light that carries your eye smoothly across the whole space.
The simplest way to separate cooking from dining is to give each area its own anchor. An island or a run of units marks the working end, while the table defines the social end. A change underfoot, such as a large rug beneath the dining table, quietly signals where one zone ends and the next begins. Browse our rugs to find a size that frames the table without creeping into the kitchen traffic.
In an open plan space the dining table is often on view from the kitchen and the living area, so it pays to choose one that looks considered from every angle. A table that seats your household with a little room to spare keeps mealtimes relaxed, while a shape that echoes the lines of the room helps it sit naturally. Our dining tables span a wide range of finishes, so you can pick one that complements your cabinetry rather than competing with it.
Where an island or peninsula meets the dining zone, bar stools are a natural bridge between cooking and eating. They offer casual seating for quick meals and homework, and they keep company close while you cook. Choosing stools that share a tone or material with your dining chairs ties the two zones together without making them identical. Explore our bar stools for heights and finishes that suit your island.
A sideboard placed on the dining side does more than hold tableware. It softens the line between kitchen and dining, offers a surface for serving and gives the social zone a piece of its own. Matching its finish to either the cabinetry or the table helps it feel deliberate. Our sideboards work well as a transition piece, bringing storage and warmth to the dining end of an open plan room.
Lighting is where open plan rooms either succeed or struggle. Each zone needs its own light so it can be used independently. Bright, even light over the worktops keeps cooking safe, while a pendant or two above the table creates a warmer, more intimate setting for meals. Being able to dim the dining lights while the kitchen stays practical lets one room serve very different moods through the day.
The secret to a cohesive open plan room is a shared palette. Carrying two or three tones across the cabinetry, table and seating lets the eye travel smoothly, so the space feels designed rather than divided. Natural materials such as timber and stone bring warmth that balances the harder surfaces of a kitchen. Keep clutter to a minimum on the worktops nearest the dining zone, since this is the part of the kitchen your guests see most. At Furniture in Fashion we bring tables, seating and storage together so you can shop modern furniture across the UK with free delivery, ready to design a kitchen diner that flows beautifully from one task to the next.
Give each zone an anchor, such as an island for cooking and a table for dining, and use a rug under the table to mark the change.
One that looks good from every angle and seats your household with room to spare. Match the finish to your cabinetry for a cohesive feel.
They work best when they share a tone or material rather than matching exactly, which links the two zones while keeping them distinct.
Use bright, even light over the worktops and warmer pendant light above the table, ideally on separate switches so each zone suits its purpose.
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