One of the designs I am very quickly growing tired of is the whole "mediterranean garden" look to the kitchens. Kitchens featuring this style are usually fixed up with large granite stoney tile arranged to look like the walls are built out of terra-cotta. They usually have viney, greenery patterns all around, engraved in cabinet door glass, on countertops, and everything is in earth tone browns and a sandy beige. Another styling cue of this is black wrought iron furniture and fixtures like shelves. Chairs made out of this stuff are terribly uncomfortable as the seats and backs cut into your skin. The design is made to look like you are outside in a courtyard at some ancient adobe homes in Spain or Italy. Open up any design magazine, and the Mediterranean garden design is in pretty much all the kitchens. It's sure to face as it invades just about every home.
The issue I have is that before the Mediterranean garden look was popular, it was the "Country Kitchen". This look was created with stenciling on the walls, and cabinetry that looks like it was stick-built out of scrap wood from a demolished barn. Country kitchens also frequently feature exposed-beam ceilings, and cut-tin light fixtures. And, you can't forget one of the things that make me want to poke my eyeballs out...wicker baskets everywhere!...UGH!!!
Hopefully the next upcoming trend in kitchens won't be as awful as these two,,,they can be thrown into the scrap-heap of history along with the way too baggy sagging clothes of the ninties you used to see where the kids kids wearing with their undershorts hanging out.
Free standing bowl sinks are an intriguing look that follows right in the Mediterranean garden theme. I can tolerate them, but they mention that they are not that practical, so they dont' go in my home. It seems like the design could be adopted into an ultra-modern look without much work.
They mention glass cabinet doors as a trend that's going to die. I don't think it is going to go completely away...there have always been a contingent of people who like glass cabinet doors. They've always been there, and I imagine will continue on, but maybe not as popular. Frosted glass and other patterned grass may be more popular than transparent glass because, as they mention, cabinets are designed to hide things inside them.
The flat-panel TV monitor is NOT going to die, but they mention the "built-ins" as something to avoid. Being in the A/V industry, I can defninitely be qualified to say go towards a built-in flat panel with caution. Flat-panel displays are great because they don't take up much space, and they can go just about anywhere. Don't get too carried away though. Install some wall sockets for CATV in the most common locations you think you may use the TV, and then buy a portable, or surface mounted unit. Don't EVER design a permanant fixture that's designed to last more than 10 years around a piece of technology! That device may go obsolete, or malfunction. Finding the exact model to replace it with isn't going to happen, and you will be stuck with an ill-fitting hole even if you get a similar model.
Oversized tile....YES...DIE!!!! This is one of the core parts of the Mediterranean garden design that I want to go away so bad! Give me my minature mid-century black & white polished tiles back!!!
Stainless steel...well, it's not going to go away, it's always been around, and it's going to stay around. However, it's probably not going to be as popular in the future as it is now.
Professional looking appliances. Probablly won't either, as people find out that they just aren't using them, and that they are terribly inefficient even when they aren't. (how many of the yuppies that buy these things actually use them regularly!)
I see the retro-fifties look gathering more steam in the future, and coming back slowly but surely, and hanging around a while. Over the next 10 years or so, I believe we will see more "fifies diner" style kitchens crop up in magazines and books, as well as a more refined modern look. There will still be a contingent of people out there that want their brand new home to look like it's been ther for 200 or even 2000 years, and they will probably be the ones to set the new style fad.