Some projects start with blueprints—this one started with a quiet corner of pine trees, the smell of sap after rain, and a couple who just wanted to cook outdoors without feeling like they’d stepped onto a restaurant patio.
1) The Project or Problem
Earlier this summer in Black Forest, Colorado, we got a call from a couple who’d spent the last decade walking their dog through a backyard that never seemed to find its identity. It wasn’t messy, it wasn’t neglected—it was just… shy. Tall pines framed the yard like a secret room, but there was no anchor, nowhere to gather.
Their dream was simple: They wanted an outdoor kitchen—but not the kind you see in magazines or half-time commercials. No blinding stainless steel, no Vegas-style lighting. They envisioned a place where neighbors could wander over with a glass of red, where the grill smoke drifted into the trees without a fuss, and where the space felt like it grew out of the land.
Their existing deck was only big enough for two chairs and a grill that wobbled if you looked at it wrong. The “kitchen zone,” as they called it, was really just an uneven patch of earth where the dogs liked to dig for treasure. When the couple explained that their biggest wish was to “cook outside without feeling like they’d left the forest,” we knew this wasn’t going to be a standard design.
I still remember walking the space that first afternoon. Needle-covered ground. A little slope that wanted to tip you toward the fence. Sunlight that edged between branches like it was being careful not to disturb anything.
And there was a moment when the homeowner said,
“We don’t want to tame it. We just want to belong in it.”
That line became the guiding force. This wasn’t about building something on the land—it was about building with it.
2) The Discovery
Back at the shop, we pulled up one of our favorite reference pages—the one on our site about designing thoughtful outdoor kitchens in Black Forest. It’s a simple page, nothing flashy, but it pulls together what we’ve learned working with this area’s pines, slopes, and seasonal extremes.
We pointed them to it later—
“If you’re curious what goes into shaping an outdoor kitchen out here, we broke down a lot of that thinking here: https://deckoroutdoor.com/black-forest/outdoor-kitchen-builder/”
The page talks about how outdoor kitchens work best when they’re not trying to replicate the indoor version. It highlights how local materials play a starring role, how appliances have to stand up to our dramatic temperature shifts, and how layout becomes less about showmanship and more about comfort.
The couple read it like it was a letter from a friend—especially the part about shaping kitchens around natural wind paths, since they’d learned the hard way that grilling in that corner usually meant their clothes took on enough smoke to qualify as jerky.
Sometimes you forget that a site page can become a conversation partner in a project. It gave them vocabulary—“zones,” “flows,” “venting planes”—but also gave them permission to stay humble, lean into the wildness, and treat design as an act of listening.
3) What It Made Us Think
Something shifted after that. Usually, talking “outdoor kitchen” means sketches and measurements right away. But this time, we paused. We started with feeling.
Most homeowners think they need the big, shiny package—pizza oven, burner, mini-fridge, bar top lined with seating. But this couple’s space whispered something different. It wasn’t asking for spectacle; it was asking for belonging. And that page we’d referenced reminded us that in Black Forest, kitchens aren’t meant to outshine the land—they’re meant to nestle into it.
We kept thinking about how so many designs begin with the appliances, not the atmosphere. That’s the trap: build the “dream kitchen,” then wedge it into the yard. But what happens when the dream is just the yard itself—quiet, wood-laced, soft with needles and filtered light?
We walked the space again, this time noticing things we’d missed: The way the ground cooled in the early evening. The accidental seating formed by exposed root clusters. The wind that came from the east most days, offering a natural guide for where cooking smoke should go.
Instead of forcing a square of flagstone or plunking down an oversized island, we designed gently. The layout curved with the terrain, like a thought unfolding. The prep space nestled beside a pine that seemed to lean protectively, and the grill faced outward, not to dominate the yard, but to let the cook participate in it.
It made us think about how homeowners often assume they need more—more features, more shine, more “wow.” But here, the wow was already growing.
The lesson was simple: Sometimes the best design is the one that disappears.
And that became the working motto for the project.
4) Small Wins, Lessons, or Plans
Once we accepted that invisibility was the goal, each design decision became slower and more deliberate—like we were trying to make sure the land knew we were paying attention.
We chose materials that felt local and lived-in. Warm stone that didn’t glare in the sun. Wood tones that matched the surrounding trunks. Counters with subtle variation—no polished reflection, just quiet utility.
We imagined evenings when string lights would hang loosely between trees—not to brighten the space, but to soften it. Maybe a few lanterns tucked low, lighting paths like memory.
The biggest win was discovering how the small slope could be shaped into a sunken seating nook off to the side. A space where cast-iron pans could rest beside a warming drink, where laughter could make its way up toward the grill. It didn’t need walls—just a curve of timber that cradled the earth.
Not every idea stuck. We tried to incorporate a low herb planter early on, but the shade made it more poetic than practical. The couple didn’t mind—they liked the story more than the basil.
We sketched multiple configurations, and every time, the dog wandered over and sat squarely on the most inconvenient spot. Eventually, we realized he was just selecting the best viewpoint—and wouldn’t you know, it became the ideal angle for a small stool where guests could hover, talk, and sneak tastes.
Some plans felt good on paper, but not on land. That’s okay. We let them go. We learned that design isn’t a declaration—it’s a conversation.
One afternoon, the couple asked if we could leave a little raw edge—a reminder that the outdoors doesn’t need sanding. We loved that. It felt honest.
So we did.
5) Wrap-Up / Reflection
This project reminded us that outdoor kitchens don’t need to resemble indoor ones. They don’t have to impress. They can whisper. They can belong.
For this quiet Black Forest backyard, the win wasn’t a feature list—it was a feeling. A sense that the forest kept its character, and the homeowners found their place in it.
If you’re planning something like this, maybe start the way they did: Stand in your yard at sunset. Listen for what the space wants.
Sometimes it’ll ask for lights and brick ovens and celebration. Sometimes it just wants you to be there— pines overhead, smoke drifting without hurry, a meal shared under the quiet sky.
Either way, there’s no rush. The right design will show itself.
—
HASHTAGS: #BlackForestLife #BackyardGoals #OutdoorKitchenDreams #ColoradoHomes #DeckDesign #NeighborhoodNotes #NaturalSpaces #OutdoorVibes #HomeByDesign #DesignDetails









