There is a room in Palm Beach and Palm Beach alone that has no equivalent in most of the country — a dedicated staging and serving pantry that sits between the kitchen and the dining room, invisible to guests, doing the work that makes the kitchen look effortless. It has a prep sink, a professional ice maker, a beverage refrigerator, glass-front cabinetry displaying the good china and crystal, and enough counter space to stage an entire dinner service before a single plate reaches the table.
This room is arriving in Orono, Wayzata, and the larger homes on the Lake Minnetonka north shore — and it solves a problem that open-concept design created.
The problem open-concept kitchens created
The open kitchen — the kitchen visible from the great room, the kitchen that’s part of the entertaining space — is the dominant residential design choice of the last twenty years. It’s the right choice. But it creates a visibility problem: everything that happens in a kitchen is now visible to everyone in the house. The prep mess. The serving staging. The open wine bottles and stacked dishes. The kitchen that looks beautiful in a design magazine is a kitchen with nothing in it. The kitchen that hosts a dinner party for twelve is a different room entirely.
The butler’s pantry solves this by giving the chaos a room. The open kitchen stays beautiful because the staging happens somewhere else. The great room stays calm because the prep mess is behind a door. Palm Beach understood this decades ago. Minnesota is figuring it out now.

What a serious butler’s pantry contains
The elements that make a butler’s pantry worth building rather than just a large closet: a prep sink with a proper bridge faucet — unlacquered brass, because this room is allowed to age. A professional ice maker under the counter. A beverage refrigerator with glass front, stocked and organized. Glass-front upper cabinetry with integrated LED lighting displaying the china and crystal that deserve to be seen. Open lower shelving for everyday serving pieces — bowls, boards, pitchers — that need to be accessible during service. And counter space, real counter space, with a material that earns the room: honed Calacatta marble that shows use without looking damaged.
The floor continues from the kitchen — wide plank white oak, the same material, the same finish, so the pantry reads as an extension of the kitchen rather than a utility room. The ceiling is lower, the lighting is warmer, the scale is more intimate. It’s designed to feel like a different room from the kitchen while being functionally part of it.

The material philosophy that defines it
A butler’s pantry has a specific relationship with material aging that most rooms don’t. The unlacquered brass hardware on the cabinet doors and drawer pulls will darken over time — the oils from hands, the humidity from the sink, the passage of use. The honed marble counter will develop a patina from prep work. The glass-front cabinet doors will show fingerprints. In a room designed for display and service, this aging is the point. The butler’s pantry that looks brand new in ten years is a butler’s pantry that hasn’t been used. The one that looks beautifully lived-in is one that hosted a hundred dinners.
This material philosophy is what separates the Palm Beach version of this room from a standard pantry retrofit. The choices — unlacquered over lacquered brass, honed over polished marble, glass fronts over solid cabinet doors — are all decisions in favor of materials that age rather than materials that resist aging.

The rebuild opportunity
A kitchen that has to be rebuilt after water damage — a burst pipe, a dishwasher failure, a refrigerator line — is a kitchen whose layout is back on the table. If the adjacent space allows for it, a butler’s pantry is a layout decision made during reconstruction, not an addition requiring separate permitting. Partners Restoration coordinates layout planning alongside insurance reconstruction scope from the first assessment, so the conversation about what the kitchen could become happens before the materials are ordered rather than after the drywall is already up.
See how an insurance kitchen rebuild in Eden Prairie became a custom chef’s kitchen: Before & After — Insurance Kitchen Rebuild in Eden Prairie.

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