WDC / LA NO. 03  ·  Beverly Hills

The Beverly Hills Kitchen Volume

The Beverly Hills Kitchen Volume — selective restoration of a 1928 Spanish Colonial Revival
1928 Spanish Colonial Revival · kitchen restoration · La Cornue range · Beverly Hills

Scope

Selective Restoration

Location

Beverly Hills, CA · 90210

Area

720 sq ft kitchen + butler’s pantry

Timeline

5 months

Completed

January 2026

Investment

$375K – $475K

1928Original Year
Spanish Colonial
720 sfKitchen + Pantry
Reorganized
5Months
Demo to Punch
$375–475KInvestment
All-In
I · The Brief

Restoration, not replacement

The home was a 1928 Wallace Neff–era Spanish Colonial Revival on a half-acre in the Beverly Hills flats. The owners had inherited the property and lived in it for six years. They loved the architecture and disliked the 1990s Tuscan kitchen that the previous owners had installed against the original plaster walls and through the original cabinet framing. The brief was specific: remove the 1990s overlay, preserve the original plaster and framing, and install a kitchen that read as if it had been part of the house since 1928. Not a period reproduction. A continuation.

The decision wasn’t between modern and traditional. It was between a kitchen that pretended to be from 1928 and a kitchen that knew it was from 2026 — but spoke the same language as the rest of the house.— On The Beverly Hills Kitchen Volume

II · The Approach

Strip back, restore, install one new layer

The work moved in three deliberate phases. First, careful removal of the 1990s additions without damage to the original substrate. Second, restoration of the discovered original plaster, cabinet framing, and a covered transom above the doorway to the butler’s pantry. Third, installation of a single new layer — a La Cornue range, custom millwork, and a single bookmatched marble island — sized and detailed to read with the original architecture.

01 · 1990s Removal

Tuscan-style stained cabinetry, faux-finished plaster overlay, granite tile counters, and a stainless commercial range hood. Removed without damage to original substrate. The dropped soffit covering the original transom was discovered and preserved during demo.

02 · Original Restoration

The original 1928 cabinet framing — found behind the 1990s boxes — was preserved and restored. Plaster walls were patched and re-troweled with matching lime plaster. The covered transom to the butler’s pantry was uncovered and restored with original arched profile.

03 · La Cornue Range

A La Cornue Château 150 in matte black with brass detailing — sized to match the original range alcove proportions. The hood is custom plaster, hand-troweled to match the wall finish, integrated as architecture rather than as equipment.

04 · One New Material

Single bookmatched honed Calacatta island, 11 feet long, sized to the original room geometry. Custom millwork in rift-sawn walnut — selected to bridge the original 1928 cabinet framing’s color tone. Floor: restored original terra-cotta saltillo tile, sealed with a low-sheen wax.

The original 1928 cabinet framing was behind the 1990s overlay the entire time. The owners had never seen it. Finding it during demo set the entire material palette.— Jacob Bachar, WDC

III · Materials

The material palette

Floor

Restored original terra-cotta saltillo · low-sheen wax

Walls

Restored original plaster · lime patch and re-trowel

Cabinetry

Rift-sawn walnut · finger-pull · period-appropriate brass hardware

Stone

Bookmatched honed Calacatta · 11-ft single-slab island

Range

La Cornue Château 150 · matte black + brass · custom plaster hood

Appliances

Sub-Zero refrigeration · Miele dishwashers · panel-front integration

IV · Schedule

Five months, end to end

3 wkDesign + Selections
+ Range Lead Time
2 wkDemo
+ Discovery
3 wkRestoration
Plaster + Framing
10 wkConstruction
Cabinetry + Stone
2 wkPunch
+ Range Commissioning
V · Credits

Trades + collaborators

Design-Build Lead

We Do Construction · Jacob Bachar

Architectural Authorship

In-house · WDC Studio · period research

Plaster Restoration

Specialist plaster restorer · lime + traditional finishes

Millwork

Southern California millwork shop · rift walnut

Stone

Bookmatched Calacatta · single-block sourcing

Range

La Cornue authorized dealer · 12-week lead time

Selective Restoration

Considering a period-appropriate kitchen restoration?

A two-week scope review covers the structural and finish layer (what’s original, what’s overlay), establishes the material palette against the home’s architectural date, and projects a realistic 5–7 month schedule. The first decision is what to uncover.

Schedule a Consultation

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How do you preserve original framing during demo?
Selective demo: pry rather than saw, hand-removal of finish layers, dust-controlled work area, and a discovery protocol that pauses the schedule when original substrate is uncovered. The 1990s cabinet boxes came off in pieces over four days rather than two.
What was the La Cornue range lead time?
Twelve weeks from order to delivery. The Château 150 is configured-to-order — matte black with brass detailing is a standard option but the integrated cooktop layout was specified to the original 1928 alcove width.
Did the original transom affect the design?
Significantly. The discovered arched transom to the butler’s pantry set the proportional system for the upper-cabinet line, the range alcove header height, and the doorway from kitchen to dining room.
Could the saltillo floor have been replaced?
Yes, but the original tile carries the 1928 reading more strongly than any contemporary replacement would. The floor was lifted, the substrate was repaired and re-screeded, and the original tile was reset with matching grout.
What is the cost premium over a modern kitchen?
Roughly 18–25% premium over a comparable modern luxury kitchen in this neighborhood. The cost lives in the restoration time, the plaster specialist, and the La Cornue range. The value lives in the home’s resale and the integration with the rest of the architecture.
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