Eight creative material options for a kitchen backsplash
Scritto da James Wormald
06.02.23
With a huge range of creative materials, colours and application techniques to choose from, the kitchen’s backsplash is a perfect way to add a little more flavour.
This Fuzzy’s Woodart Kitchen in Wiener Neustadt, Austria, extends its worktop upwards to create a characterful splashback that better exhibits the marble-look material
This Fuzzy’s Woodart Kitchen in Wiener Neustadt, Austria, extends its worktop upwards to create a characterful splashback that better exhibits the marble-look material
×The most important rule for a kitchen backsplash to stand by is right there in the name. An imperative part of kitchen design, backsplashes are there to guard walls and unreachable undercabinet space from problematic stains, splashes and spills. They also, however, represent a useful creative outlet for kitchen designers and interior architects.
Kitchen backsplashes can cut a strong, confident line straight through the monotony of the kitchen’s colour palette
By adding outlandishly striking slivers of colour, pattern and texture, kitchen backsplashes can cut a strong, confident line straight through the monotony of the kitchen’s colour palette. Here are some of the different materials and design techniques that help backsplashes keep kitchens both clean and creative.
Pink-veined marble planter with integrated electrical points at the Midi du Midi project (top, middle) and Egger’s PerfectSense worktop which continues up the wall (bottom). Photo: Jef Jacobs (top, middle)
Pink-veined marble planter with integrated electrical points at the Midi du Midi project (top, middle) and Egger’s PerfectSense worktop which continues up the wall (bottom). Photo: Jef Jacobs (top, middle)
×Extending the worktop
When searching for a hardwearing surface material with striking design options that stands up to stains and scratches, there’s one right under your nose already. Dries Otten applied the same pink-veined marble from his Midi du Midi project’s kitchen worktop to a bespoke planter and electrical connections atop the home’s kitchen island, for example, protecting the integrated sockets from roaming spills. Fuzzy’s Woodart kitchen in Wiener Neustadt, Austria, meanwhile, shows how by using the same marble-effect material from Egger for both worktop and backsplash, the countertop is extended in a depth-defying optical illusion.
The mirrored splashback at the top-floor Above the Roofs apartment helps users see over the treetops, even when faced away. Photos: Mierswa & Kluska
The mirrored splashback at the top-floor Above the Roofs apartment helps users see over the treetops, even when faced away. Photos: Mierswa & Kluska
×Here’s looking at you: reflective backsplash
An alternative way to optically extend worktop depth is with the use of mirrored surfaces as splashbacks. The reflective material takes a little more elbow grease to keep streak-free, but can seemingly double the size of the counter. The Above the Roofs apartment in Munich by holzrausch Planung & Werkstätten, for example, positions its 50-sqm kitchen’s sink against an interior wall, and yet still gives its users a high-rise view, through floor-to-ceiling terrace windows.
Waterproof panels in laminated glass like Durness 1 from TECNOGRAFICA bring bespoke imagery with a smooth, seamless finish, perfect for use as a kitchen backsplash
Waterproof panels in laminated glass like Durness 1 from TECNOGRAFICA bring bespoke imagery with a smooth, seamless finish, perfect for use as a kitchen backsplash
×Seamless imagination: waterproof panels
If you see the realm of the kitchen backsplash as an opportunity to add character to an otherwise monotonous kitchen space, however, large-format wall panels like decorative laminated glass panels from TECNOGRAFICA can present a variety of colours, patterns or even bespoke imagery to whet the appetite. The seamless panels provide a smooth, uninterrupted surface that’s easier to clean than tiles.
Glamorous gold (top), sea blue ceramics (middle) and contrast grouting (bottom). Photos: Jakub Skokan, Martin Tůma / BoysPlay Nice (top), Moon Architect + Builder (middle), Nicholas Worley (bottom)
Glamorous gold (top), sea blue ceramics (middle) and contrast grouting (bottom). Photos: Jakub Skokan, Martin Tůma / BoysPlay Nice (top), Moon Architect + Builder (middle), Nicholas Worley (bottom)
×Creative freedom: ceramic tiles
One of the most popular backsplash options, ceramic tiles offer the perfect blend of waterproof and hygienic functionality, along with creative freedom. The vivid colours, patterns and graphical shapes to choose from can provide an edge of glamour – like the gold splashback in this apartment in Prague, Czech Republic, or a colourful contrast – like The Paragon maisonette in Bristol, UK, which mixes bright yellow cabinetry with sea blue tiles and matching handles, but this only tells part of the story, as even once the tiles themselves have been chosen, there’s still the decision of how to apply them.
Once the tiles themselves have been chosen, there’s still the decision of how to apply them
Possible application patterns include linear, diamond, brickwork, stepladder, herringbone, chevron or weave techniques – and those are just the rectilinear tiles. Meanwhile, there’s the additional option of mixing up the tile colours or contrast grouting, like the white linear tiles with blue grouting at this Hølte kitchen in Hackney, UK.
Raw and exposed yet warm and inviting. Brickwork brick walls bring cosy minimalism to this Colombian kitchen. Photo: Mateo Soto
Raw and exposed yet warm and inviting. Brickwork brick walls bring cosy minimalism to this Colombian kitchen. Photo: Mateo Soto
×Adding texture: facing a brick wall
While the creative possibilities of ceramics are many, there’s a certain pleasure in being confined to the material restrictions of the pre-existing space. Bosqueazul House by ALH Taller de Arquitectura in Medellín, Colombia, for example, utilises its existing brick wall to create a kitchen backsplash with a textured, naturally disorganised combination of colours that’s both warm and sustainable, and complies with the rest of the home’s industrial look, relying on natural wood and raw concrete surfaces as well.
Dark green painted wood panelling above the split adds a period look to Weybridge House, a Victorian renovation in London, UK. Photos: Adam Letch
Dark green painted wood panelling above the split adds a period look to Weybridge House, a Victorian renovation in London, UK. Photos: Adam Letch
×The split: period wood panelling
Given the importance of hardwearing waterproof materiality to kitchen backsplashes, it may seem strange to bring in wood as a surface option, but while continuing a single backsplash from worktop to ceiling heightens and opens up a room, by instead drawing a line between the two materials, designers can add more contrasts, with a larger palette of materials. This Victorian home’s new kitchen in London, UK, for example, applies dark painted wood panelling above the split, enhancing the period features found elsewhere in the residence.
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