Whole-Home Kitchen + Bath

One project story for the kitchen, baths, and the rhythm of the whole house.

Worktimate’s combined-scope approach is designed for homeowners who want finish continuity, cleaner sequencing, and one accountable lead across the rooms that absorb the most daily wear.

Best Fit When

  • You want kitchen and bath finishes to feel connected, not coincidental.
  • You would rather solve disruption once than repeat the same renovation cycle twice.
  • You want one homeowner-facing lead to manage scope, schedule, and selections.
One planning process for the rooms that shape daily routine most
Material continuity across cabinetry, stone, hardware, and lighting
Sequencing that reduces stop-start renovation fatigue
A single investment conversation instead of disconnected proposals

One Discovery Story

Kitchen and bath priorities are aligned up front so layout changes, investment planning, and household disruption are discussed as one connected scope.

Shared Selections

Cabinetry, stone, plumbing, lighting, and finish decisions are reviewed together so the house feels designed in chapters, not in isolated rooms.

Coordinated Delivery

Bundled sequencing creates cleaner trade handoffs, clearer milestone communication, and a calmer experience than running kitchen and bath work as separate events.

Project Spotlight

McLean Kitchen + Primary Bath

A combined-scope spotlight centered on warm millwork, natural light, and one disciplined sequence for kitchen and primary-bath planning.

This project spotlight shows how a kitchen and primary bath can be planned as one coherent experience, with linked selections, shared materials, and a clearer schedule from room to room.

Kitchen and bath planning aligned under one scope story
Warm-modern material palette with layered textures
A homeowner journey centered on clarity before construction

Material Continuity

Warm oak cabinetryNatural stone surfacesLayered brass accents
Location
McLean, Virginia
Timeline
14-week target build
Investment
Combined-scope planning range
View the full spotlight

Whole-Home Editorial Moments

Bundled projects read best when continuity, finish rhythm, and everyday movement are shown as one household story.

These moments show how continuity carries across kitchen and bath through finish rhythm, circulation, and the way the home works from morning to night.

Arrival view through a refined McLean kitchen with warm oak cabinetry and calm circulation.

Layout Read

Arrival Through the Kitchen

The first read of the home depends on clear circulation and sightlines, so the island, pathways, and adjacent transitions all have to feel composed from the first step in.

Close editorial study of oak millwork, stone surfaces, and brass accents in a Virginia remodel.

Material Study

Oak, Stone, and Brass

Warm oak millwork, stone surfaces, and restrained brass accents give the kitchen and primary bath one shared material language without making the rooms feel repetitive.

Warm blue-hour kitchen with layered evening light and a cat resting near the window seat.

Light and Mood

Morning-to-Evening Warmth

The combined scope is planned to hold soft daylight and layered evening light so the home reads calm and residential at every hour, not just bright at noon.

Whole-Home Questions

Should kitchen and bath work start at the same time?

Not always. The right answer depends on household routines, available access, and whether the cleaner path is parallel work or phased sequencing under one scope plan.

How is finish continuity protected?

Linked selections are reviewed together so hardware tone, stone veining, cabinetry warmth, and lighting language feel intentional from room to room.

What changes when the scope is bundled?

Budget framing, trade coordination, storage planning, and communication all become simpler when the project is managed as one household story.

Is whole-home right for every project?

No. The consultation is used to decide whether one combined scope or a phased approach will better protect comfort, timing, and investment priorities.

If the rooms need to work together, the plan should too.

Start with a consultation about timing, household routines, and whether a bundled kitchen-and-bath scope is the right move for your home.