Part barbecue station, part tiki bar - or any other theme you choose, the Barbecue Island is a high-tech modular kitchen that delivers efficiency to your backyard chilling experience. Each Barbecue Island is custom designed to incorporate dining and bar areas, sinks, storage areas, refrigeradors, and chilled drink dispensers. The look of these luxury barbecue islands is modern and a step above the competition.
Inspired by the Swilken Bridge on the 18th green at St. Andrews in Scotland, the Swilken Bench from Acronym Designs delivers smooth lines, making a nice addition to the crib, especially if you’re a golfer.
According to Acronym, “this bench follows simple structural principals and uses the simplicity of form to showcase the beauty of the wood. Reclaimed hardwoods are constructed into a laminate strip top that shows off the variations in color and figuring in beautiful hardwoods. The smooth curved top is accented with a scalloped underside. Hidden connections keep the bench sleek.”
Leave the boom box at home. iPods? A thing of the past. Enter the Boombench, a 500 watt speaker-packed bench with eight 60-watt co-axial speakers and two subwoofers accessable through Bluetooth. Simply connect your Bluetooth to this super-sized Docking Station and rock out to 95 db of quality sound. Just think of what it would be like to bump this bench next to your backyard pool, not to mention if you came across one of these babies in the park. Designed by Michael Schoner of NL Architects, check out the Boombench in the video above.
The Falo designer patio heater, from Flame Heating Design, has a heating radius of 20 feet and can be controled via remote. A nice feature for the cold months that are coming our way this winter. The Falo features a torch-like flame that is totally insensible to wind, has automatic ignition, adjustible heat between 8 kW-12 kW and elegant yet tough stainless steal/aluminum construction. Available through Flame Heating Deisgn.
“In its largest configuration, on command, a series of nine motorized towers rise from their respective underground weather-tight concrete “bunkers” to reveal a system of quintessential scale, power, and performance. The main video tower houses a rigid, one piece cast acrylic rear projection screen that is Eleven Feet high and Twenty Feet wide. The screen itself, weighs over 3000lbs. This particular type of screen was chosen for its superior image quality as well as the fact that it does not “flex” in a breeze as a “fabric-type” flexible projection material will,” according to the South Florida company.