Published On: 2026/05/7

The modern catering kitchen: the interplay of planning, cold rooms and hygiene standards

The modern catering kitchen: the interplay of planning, cold rooms and hygiene standards

Published On: 2026/05/7

Anyone planning a restaurant kitchen today is no longer just building a room for cooking. Modern restaurants are increasingly working like small production facilities: food is delivered, stored, processed, cooled and passed on in clearly structured processes. Hygiene, efficiency and food safety take center stage.

It quickly becomes apparent how complex these requirements have become, especially in new buildings or renovations. Cold rooms, preparation kitchens, storage areas and production zones must be logically coordinated. At the same time, the demands on materials, cleaning and durability are increasing. A modern catering kitchen is therefore not created by chance – it is the result of well thought-out planning.

New requirements for catering kitchens

The requirements for commercial kitchens have changed significantly in recent years. In addition to traditional work areas such as preparation, cooking and serving, topics such as hygiene management, flow of goods and zone separation now play a central role.

Many businesses today have so-called production kitchens where larger quantities are prepared or pre-produced. Clear structures are particularly important in restaurants with catering, system catering or in-house food production. Raw materials, processed food and finished products must be kept separate in order to avoid cross-contamination and ensure hygienic processes.

To ensure that these processes work, the planning of a modern commercial kitchen begins long before the actual construction phase. Architectural decisions, room layout and technical infrastructure have a significant influence on how efficiently a business can work later on. Those who take these aspects into account at an early stage will create a kitchen that is not only hygienic, but also economical.

Cold rooms as a central element of modern kitchens

Refrigeration is a particularly important part of every catering kitchen. Cold rooms and cold cells form the backbone of the entire food chain within a business. Temperature ranges must be reliably maintained from the receipt of goods to interim storage and preparation.

Modern restaurants therefore often have several separate cooling zones. Raw products, prepared ingredients and finished dishes are stored in different temperature ranges. This keeps the cold chain stable and food retains its quality.

However, planning a cold room for the food service industry is not just about technology. Spatial integration also plays a decisive role. Cold rooms must be sensibly integrated into the flow of goods, enable short distances and at the same time support hygienic separation. Well thought-out cold room planning makes the kitchen staff’s daily work easier and ensures that processes run smoothly.

Choice of materials in hygienic construction

In addition to room structure and technology, the choice of materials is also a decisive factor in the construction of modern catering kitchens. Walls, ceilings and surfaces are exposed to intensive cleaning, moisture and strong temperature fluctuations on a daily basis. Materials must therefore not only be robust, but also reliably meet hygiene requirements.

Surfaces that are easy to clean and on which no germs can settle are particularly important. Low-joint designs make cleaning easier and reduce maintenance work in the long term. Many professional kitchens therefore use special hygiene materials that have been specially developed for the requirements of food processing.

One example of this is wall solutions made of glass fiber reinforced plastic (GRP). These materials are particularly resistant to moisture and cleaning agents and also offer a permanently hygienic surface. Especially in areas such as cold rooms, preparation kitchens or production zones, such solutions can contribute to food safety in the long term.

Planning and implementation from a single source

Planning a catering kitchen involves many different trades. Architecture, refrigeration technology, hygiene materials and interior fittings must be precisely coordinated. If these areas are planned separately, interface problems often arise, which can cause time and costs later on.

This is precisely where the Wirth Group’s integrated concept comes in. Planning, construction and hygiene solutions are interlinked within the Group. While the Schwan Projekt GmbH takes care of the architectural planning, process structure and construction coordination, while FoodTec Buildings takes care of the structural implementation of hygienic production areas – from cold room construction to specialized interior fittings.

This close collaboration results in kitchen and production areas that are designed to be both functional and hygienic. For operators, this means above all planning security and efficient implementation of their construction project.

Why the Wirth Group is your ideal partner

The modern catering kitchen is much more than just a workplace for chefs. It is a complex system of refrigeration technology, production logic, hygiene structures and durable materials. Anyone planning a new kitchen or modernizing an existing facility today benefits from a holistic view of all factors – from room planning to interior design.

The Wirth Group supports catering businesses, food producers and commercial kitchens in the structured implementation of such projects. From initial planning to cold room construction and hygienic wall solutions, we create kitchen spaces that are efficient, hygienic and future-proof in the long term.

Published On: 2026/05/7Categories: Unkategorisiert

Teilen Sie den Beitrag auf Ihrer Plattform