26/04/2026
This year, around EuroCucina and Milan Design Week, one thing became very clear to me: the kitchen is no longer just furniture. It is becoming architecture. A living system. A technical object that needs to be beautiful, functional, flexible and almost invisible when you don’t use it.
And Valcucine continues to be one of the brands that shows this better than almost anyone else.
What I like about them is not only the visual impact. Yes, the kitchens look amazing. Yes, the materials are beautiful. Yes, everything feels expensive, precise and very Italian.
But the real value is in the systems.
The way they hide the working area.
The way storage becomes part of the architecture.
The way a kitchen can open when you need it and disappear when you don’t.
The way glass, metal, stone and ceramic replace the usual furniture logic of PAL and MDF.
Valcucine doesn’t treat the kitchen like a set of cabinets.
They treat it like a machine for living.
And this is what impressed me the most in Milan this year: the best kitchens are not trying to look like kitchens anymore. They are trying to become part of the house, part of the wall, part of the space, part of the lifestyle.
Of course, this level of design comes with a price. A serious Valcucine kitchen can easily go from tens of thousands of euros to well over 100.000 EUR, depending on configuration, systems, materials, appliances and installation.
But when you see the engineering behind it, you understand something important:
Luxury is not just about expensive finishes.
Luxury is when complexity disappears.
When you open a door and everything is there.
When you close it and the space becomes clean again.
When the mechanism works so smoothly that you forget how much thinking is behind it.
For me, as someone who builds bespoke furniture, this is the real lesson from Milan:
The future is not just custom-made furniture.
The future is custom-thinking.