[KITCHEN DESIGN]
THE INDIAN KITCHEN IS NOT A WESTERN KITCHEN
Most kitchen design in India copies Western precedents. Open-plan kitchens. Island countertops. Minimal storage. Appliances as design elements. These concepts work in homes where cooking is occasional, where one person cooks, where meals are simple.
They fail catastrophically in Indian homes.
An Indian kitchen is where multiple family members cook simultaneously. Where spice is ground fresh. Where oil splatters during tadka. Where vessels are large and numerous. Where storage requirements are substantial. Where the kitchen is closed off from living spaces because cooking creates heat, smoke, and smell. Where efficiency and functionality matter more than Instagram aesthetics.
Most kitchens designed by studios unfamiliar with Indian cooking patterns create spaces that are beautiful but dysfunctional. Insufficient counter space for meal preparation. Inadequate storage for the volume of vessels, spices, and dry goods an Indian household requires. Appliances chosen for appearance rather than the actual cooking demands placed on them. Materials that stain easily or require constant maintenance.
Insyde Studio has completed more than thirty kitchens across Bangalore. Every one was designed specifically for Indian cooking patterns. Not adapted from Western kitchens. Not styled to look contemporary while ignoring functional requirements. Designed from first principles for how Indian families actually cook.


HOW INDIAN FAMILIES COOK
Understanding this is fundamental to kitchen design.
Multiple people cook simultaneously. An Indian meal often involves one person preparing vegetables, another managing the stove, a third handling dough or rice. The kitchen must accommodate simultaneous activity at different stations without people colliding. Counter space must be distributed. The stove area must be accessible. Prep areas must exist independently of cooking areas.
Cooking is intense and generates significant heat and smoke. Tadka creates oil splatter. Pressure cookers release steam. Frying generates smoke. Cooking on Indian stoves is not gentle. It’s vigorous. The kitchen environment must withstand this. Materials must be easy to clean after oil splatter. Ventilation must be adequate to remove smoke and heat. Finishes must not degrade from heat exposure.


Vessels are large and numerous. A Western kitchen might have four pots and pans. An Indian kitchen has pressure cookers in multiple sizes, heavy-bottomed cooking vessels, large serving bowls, specialized equipment for specific dishes. This volume of equipment requires substantial storage. Open shelving won’t work. Random cabinets won’t work. The storage system must be designed specifically for the volume and variety of equipment used.
Spices and dry goods are stored in quantity. An Indian kitchen typically stocks thirty or more spices. Flour, rice, lentils, nuts, oils are purchased in bulk. These require organized, accessible storage. Containers must keep items fresh and protected from moisture and pests. The storage system must allow quick identification and access. This is not optional decoration. It’s essential kitchen infrastructure.
The kitchen is closed off from living spaces. Western open-plan kitchens work when cooking is minimal. In Indian homes, cooking generates heat, smoke, and smell that should not permeate living areas. The kitchen is typically a separate, enclosed room. This means the kitchen design is not part of overall home aesthetic flow. It’s a functional space that should be designed for efficiency first, aesthetics second.
Water usage is substantial. Rinsing vegetables, cleaning vessels, soaking grains—Indian cooking uses significant water. The kitchen layout must accommodate this. The sink area must be functional for these tasks. Drainage must be adequate. Water pressure must support simultaneous uses.
Cooking happens at specific times, intensely. Breakfast might involve cooking for thirty minutes. Lunch involves two to three hours of preparation. Dinner involves another two hours. These concentrated periods of intense activity require a kitchen designed for efficiency. Every step of the cooking process must be optimized. The distance between prep area and stove matters. The storage location of frequently used items matters. The accessibility of the sink matters. Small inefficiencies compound over hours of cooking.


STORAGE SOLUTIONS FOR INDIAN KITCHENS
We begin by understanding your specific cooking patterns.
We design the kitchen as a separate, functional space
We create distinct functional zones
We prioritize counter space substantially
We design storage systems specifically for the volume of equipment and ingredients.
We specify ventilation adequate for Indian cooking.
We choose appliances for performance, not aesthetics.
We design the layout to minimize steps during cooking.
[KITCHEN DESIGN]
MATERIAL INTELLIGENCE IN INDIAN KITCHENS
Materials in an Indian kitchen face specific challenges. Heat. Moisture. Oil splatter. Staining. Wear from heavy use. We select materials with these conditions in mind.
Material Innovation
Countertops must withstand heat and staining.
Some clients insist on granite. Granite is dense and more stain-resistant than marble, but it still requires sealing and care. If you choose granite, we specify regular sealing and discuss the maintenance honestly. Granite can work but requires commitment to maintenance.
Backsplashes must be easy to clean after oil splatter.
Flooring must be non-slip and easy to clean.
Cabinetry must be robust and moisture-resistant.
Paint and finishes must resist moisture and staining.
Stainless steel is used strategically
Insyde Studio
We typically design kitchens using specific workflow patterns optimized for how Indian families cook.
The galley layout with counter space on both sides and the stove positioned for efficient workflow. One person can prep on one side while another manages the stove. The layout is compact and efficient.
The L-shaped layout with prep area on one leg and stove on the other. This allows multiple people to work independently. The corner requires careful planning so it doesn’t become wasted space or a collision point.
The peninsula layout with an extended counter providing additional prep space and allowing someone to work while facing the rest of the kitchen. This works well when the kitchen is larger.
Regardless of layout, we ensure the working triangle—sink, stove, storage—is organized efficiently. We minimize steps between these three key zones. We ensure multiple people can work without interfering with each other.
Spice organization is non-negotiable. We design dedicated spice storage near the stove where spices are accessed during cooking. This might be a carousel system, tiered shelving, or deep drawers with custom inserts. The system must allow quick identification and access. If you have thirty spices, finding turmeric shouldn’t require searching through the entire collection.
Dry goods storage must be accessible and protected. Flour, rice, lentils, nuts—these are stored in airtight containers on dedicated shelves. We typically design lower shelves or drawers for these items since they’re heavy. The containers should be uniform, stackable, and labeled. This might involve a dedicated pantry or substantial dedicated shelving within the kitchen.
Cooking vessel storage must be organized by frequency of use. Pressure cookers are frequently accessed. They should be stored in easy-to-reach locations. Large serving bowls or specialty equipment used less frequently can be stored higher or deeper. We organize storage so you access items without moving other items to reach them.
Oil, salt, and frequently used condiments must be immediately accessible. These are typically stored on open shelving near the stove or in a dedicated cabinet with easy access. They shouldn’t require opening multiple cabinets or moving items to access them.
Baking equipment, if used, requires separate dedicated storage. Rolling pins, baking sheets, mixing bowls—these have specific storage needs. We design dedicated drawers or shelving for baking equipment if this is part of your cooking.
Cleaning supplies are stored separately from food storage. Never combined. We typically designate a lower cabinet or under-sink storage for cleaning materials, keeping them completely separate from food and cooking equipment.
VENTILATION IN INDIAN KITCHENS
Ventilation is more critical in Indian kitchens than in most Western kitchens because of the intensity and type of cooking.
We specify powerful chimneys or downdraft systems.
Exhaust must be directed outside.
The chimney position is optimized for cooking patterns.
We consider noise levels.
LIGHTING DESIGN IN LIVING ROOMS
Ambient lighting
Task lighting
Accent lighting
Layered control
Natural light integration
Color And Finish Strategy
Color in a living room should feel intentional, not arbitrary. We approach color strategically.


Neutral backgrounds provide longevity.
Color enters through furnishings and accessories.
We consider how color interacts with natural light.
Material finishes add visual interest without color.
The Complete Living Room Experience
Our approach to living room design integrates all these considerations. We’re not designing a beautiful photograph. We’re designing a room that functions beautifully, performs well in Bangalore’s climate, and will still be relevant in ten years.
This means every material choice is considered for long-term performance, not just initial aesthetics. Every lighting decision balances ambiance with functionality. Every spatial arrangement respects how you actually live. Every finish is selected for its ability to age gracefully rather than show wear quickly.
This comprehensive approach requires more thoughtful planning than generic room design. It requires understanding your specific space and how you use it. It requires honest conversation about material performance and maintenance. It requires design conviction rather than stylistic flexibility.


READY TO DESIGN YOUR HOME?
If you’re considering a residential project and want to understand how a complete home should be designed, where your kitchen functions as part of a comprehensive whole rather than an isolated space, let’s begin a conversation.
A thoughtfully designed Indian kitchen doesn’t exist in isolation. It’s part of how your entire home functions. How it connects to your dining area and entry. How it integrates into your family’s daily life. How its design philosophy extends throughout your residence. How materials and finishes work together across all your spaces.
When you design your complete home with this integrated thinking, every room becomes better. Your kitchen becomes a space where efficient, joyful cooking happens daily.
Book a discovery meeting with our team. Share how your family cooks. Discuss your functional requirements. We’ll assess your space and present a comprehensive design approach for your complete residence, one where your kitchen is designed specifically for Indian cooking patterns and integrated as part of the whole.
Your home deserves this level of integrated thinking. Let’s create it together.




