The closed kitchen was the standard in American residential construction through most of the postwar era. The ranch, the Cape, the split-level — they were all designed with a kitchen as a separate utility room, sealed off from the entertaining space. That made sense in 1962. It doesn't make sense in how most families actually use a house today.
The most common renovation request we get in Cranston's postwar homes is opening the kitchen to the dining room or living room. The request is simple. The execution requires a structural assessment and careful planning.
The structural issue in Cranston's postwar homes
The wall between a Cranston kitchen and the adjacent room is very often load-bearing. It carries the floor load from above — or in a one-story ranch, it carries the roof structure. You cannot remove it without replacing what it was doing: transferring load from above to the foundation below.
The correct solution is a beam. A properly sized beam, installed in a header position with posts or columns carrying the load down to the foundation, allows the wall to come out and the structure to perform exactly as it should. The sizing of that beam depends on the span and the load — it is not a guess. We assess the structural conditions before any demo happens. We size the work correctly. We pull the permits that are required for this type of work.
Some contractors skip the assessment. Some hope the wall isn't load-bearing. Some install undersized headers because they look adequate. The consequences show up later — in floors that sag, in doors that stick, in visible deflection across the span. We don't work that way.
What the project involves:
- Structural assessment — identifying what the wall carries and how the load needs to be redistributed
- Permit filing for structural work
- Demolition of the existing wall
- Beam installation and post or column placement
- Patching and finishing of the ceiling, floor, and adjacent walls
- Any kitchen or dining room updates that are part of the broader scope
In an Edgewood Victorian
Opening an Edgewood Victorian kitchen to the adjacent space is a more complex project. The original room configuration in these homes has significant character — built-in details, original woodwork, planned proportions. Opening to an adjacent space has to be done thoughtfully to preserve what makes the house worth renovating in the first place. We think about these projects architecturally, not just structurally.