There’s an emotional connection to the kitchen table that’s quite unlike the one to any other piece of furniture. From intimate family meals to boisterous dinner parties with friends, it’s a setting for connection and comfort, a spot to share thoughts, creativity and celebration. It’s also where Toronto architect and her long-time friends Andrew Sardone and Philip Sparks began chatting about the latter couple’s kitchen renovation. After living in their 84-square-metre, one-bedroom condo in a converted Victorian-era church in the city’s Junction neighbourhood since 2014, Sardone and Sparks had outgrown their kitchen in function and aesthetic. “It was a standard condo kitchen designed for a future unknown inhabitant,” Wang…
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