Henderson Kitchen Remodel
Designed and Built by Kingdom & Co.
Custom kitchens for Henderson homes. Kingdom & Co. is the back-to-back NARI Remodeler of the Year winner and has been featured on HGTV’s Property Brothers, in the Architectural Digest AD PRO Directory, and by Martha Stewart‘s editorial team. Our 2026 NARI Remodeler of the Year award was won, in part, on the strength of the kitchen at The Lexington — a 1990s-era Henderson home transformed into an open kitchen, living, and dining space anchored by a thirteen-foot island.
Free in-home kitchen design consultation for Henderson homeowners.

The Lexington, Henderson
We have been recognized by:
Henderson Kitchen Remodels We Build
Every Kingdom & Co. kitchen remodel is custom-designed for the Henderson home it lives in. We don’t have package menus or stock layouts. Instead, every kitchen is developed around how you cook, how you entertain, and how your home’s architecture supports the new space. Below are the categories of kitchen work we deliver most often in Henderson.
Custom Cabinetry
Designed in-house by Kingdom & Co. and fabricated by our preferred cabinet partners. White oak, painted, walnut, and inset cabinet styles in full overlay or inset construction. Brass, matte black, or unlacquered hardware. Hardware-disappearing detail work where the architecture takes the lead. The Lexington kitchen — winner of the 2026 NARI Remodeler of the Year award — uses custom Oakcraft framed full-overlay cabinetry in the Nantucket door style, finished in Sherwin-Williams Incredible White on the perimeter, with a Rift White Oak island in a custom Moonlight finish.
Premium Stone Countertops
Calacatta, quartzite, marble, and natural stone slabs sourced from premier suppliers. Waterfall edges, custom thickness, full slab backsplashes, and slab work coordinated to repeat across other surfaces in the home. In The Lexington, the kitchen countertop material echoes the stone used in the living room mantle — a small detail that ties two rooms together with one continuous material story.
Layout redesigns
Wall removals, island additions, and traffic flow reconfigurations that transform how the kitchen actually functions. At The Lexington, we removed the walls separating the old formal dining, sunken bar, and cramped kitchen and replaced them with one connected gathering room anchored by a thirteen-foot island. The result wasn’t just a bigger kitchen — it was a kitchen that finally worked for cooking AND entertaining.
Appliance Integration
Sub-Zero, Wolf, Miele, Gaggenau, and La Cornue installations. Panel-front integration, hidden ventilation, built-in coffee systems, and warming drawers placed for actual use rather than aesthetic alone. We coordinate appliance specifications during the design phase so the cabinetry layout reflects the exact equipment going into the kitchen.
Butler’s Pantries and Sculleries
A concealed working pantry, scullery, or butler’s pantry is the single upgrade that transforms how a luxury kitchen functions for entertaining. The Lexington’s scullery — tucked behind the main kitchen — carries its own prep sink, microwave, beverage refrigerator, small-appliance garage, and a new window the original layout didn’t have. The mess stays out of sight. The main kitchen stays gallery-clean.
Lighting and Architectural Details
Designer pendant rows over the island, recessed accent lighting under cabinets, statement chandeliers over breakfast tables, and integrated electrical for the kitchen of your specifications. Architectural ceilings — coffered, beamed, or vaulted — that bring tall kitchen volumes down into human scale. The Lexington’s coffered ceiling continues from the entry through the kitchen into the living room, creating one continuous architectural story across three rooms.
Featured Henderson Kitchen: The Lexington
The kitchen at The Lexington is the room that earned Kingdom & Co. the 2026 NARI Remodeler of the Year award in the Residential Interior Over $500,000 category. It’s also the clearest example of what a Henderson kitchen remodel can look like when design, layout, and material continuity all come together as one project.
The Original Kitchen
The original Lexington layout had three competing spaces in the main living zone: a formal dining room, a sunken bar, and a cramped kitchen that never quite functioned for either cooking or gathering. Walls separated each, and the kitchen itself was wedged into the smallest of the three. The family entertained often. The kitchen made it harder, not easier.
The Redesigned Kitchen
We removed the walls separating the formal dining, sunken bar, and old kitchen, and replaced them with a single connected room anchored by a thirteen-foot island. A large alcove range sits under new windows flanked by glass-front display cabinets. The coffered ceiling continues from the entry overhead so the architecture reads as one connected idea. The cabinetry is custom Oakcraft, framed full-overlay in the Nantucket door style. The perimeter is finished in Sherwin-Williams Incredible White; the island is Rift White Oak in a custom Moonlight finish. Countertops along the wall and wrapping the island echo the stone used later in the living room mantle, tying two rooms together with one material story.
The Hidden Scullery
Tucked behind the main kitchen, a concealed galley scullery functions as the home’s true working pantry. It carries its own prep sink, microwave, beverage refrigerator, small-appliance garage, and a new window. Cabinetry here is Kingdom & Co. custom cabinetry in Maple with the same Incredible White finish — keeping the hidden room consistent with the public kitchen. When the homeowners entertain, the mess stays out of sight and the main kitchen stays gallery-clean.
Why This Kitchen Won the Award
NARI’s Remodeler of the Year award in the Residential Interior Over $500,000 category isn’t given for a beautiful kitchen alone. It’s given for the depth of design and construction work that delivered the result. The Lexington kitchen earned the award because: walls came down structurally without compromising the home, the new layout finally matched how the family actually lives, the cabinetry and stone work integrated seamlessly with the rest of the house, and a working scullery handled the entertaining mess without taking visual space away from the main kitchen. That’s the kind of work design-build is built for.
Henderson Kitchen Remodel Cost (2026 Estimates)
Kitchen remodel costs vary based on cabinetry construction, countertop material, appliance package, and whether the project involves layout changes. The ranges below reflect what Kingdom & Co. typically delivers across the Henderson market in 2026.
Mid-Range Luxury Kitchen
$80,000 – $150,000. Full cabinetry refresh, quartz or quartzite countertops, premium appliance package, lighting upgrades. Layout stays within the existing footprint.
High-End Kitchen Remodel
$150,000 – $250,000+. Custom cabinetry, natural stone countertops (calacatta, quartzite, marble), Sub-Zero/Wolf/Miele appliance package, layout reconfiguration, and architectural ceiling or lighting upgrades.
Luxury Kitchen with Scullery or Butler’s Pantry
$250,000 – $500,000+. The full scope: custom cabinetry on multiple surfaces, slab stone walls, integrated appliances, layout changes through wall removal, and a concealed working scullery or butler’s pantry. The Lexington’s kitchen scope falls in this category.
PERMITS, HOA APPROVAL, AND THE HENDERSON PROCESS
Henderson runs its own building department with permitting and inspection processes that differ from the City of Las Vegas. Communities like MacDonald Highlands, Anthem Country Club, and Seven Hills also enforce architectural review standards through their HOAs. Kingdom & Co.’s project managers are familiar with these local requirements and account for them before construction begins — not as an afterthought.
City of Henderson Building Department
All Henderson home remodel work involving structural changes, plumbing reroutes, electrical changes, or mechanical work requires permits issued through the City of Henderson Building & Fire Safety Department. Permit review varies based on project scope and the number of revision cycles required.
HOA
Architectural Review
MacDonald Highlands, Anthem Country Club, and Seven Hills each enforce strict architectural review through their HOA committees. Setback requirements, exterior material restrictions, and design guidelines vary by community. Inspirada, Cadence, and Green Valley Ranch each enforce their own association-level standards. Kingdom & Co. prepares the full HOA application — including architectural renderings and material specifications — during the design phase, so approvals are secured before construction begins.
End-to-End Permit Management
Our team manages all city and HOA submissions, follows up on review cycles, schedules required inspections, and resolves any conditions that arise. You never deal directly with the City of Henderson or your HOA committee unless you want to. That’s part of what design-build means.
OUR THREE-PHASE PROCESS
Every Kingdom & Co. project moves through three distinct phases. The structure is what allows us to deliver award-winning work at the scope of The Lexington — and it’s what eliminates the most common source of frustration in remodeling: miscommunication between separate designers and builders.
Phase 1: Consultation
On-site visit at your Henderson property. We walk the space together with you, discuss what’s working and what isn’t, and outline a realistic scope, budget range, and approach. This phase is free.
Phase 2: Design
Our in-house design team develops architectural plans, material selections, fixture specifications, and 3D renderings. Because our designers and builders work alongside each other from day one, every design choice is vetted for constructability and cost before it’s presented to you. Fewer surprises. Fewer change orders. A design that reflects what you want AND what can be executed on time and on budget.
Phase 3: Construction
Permitting through the City of Henderson, HOA submission, site preparation, structural work, mechanical and electrical installation, finishes, and final walkthrough. Kingdom & Co. self-performs finish carpentry and plumbing with our own crews, and partners with preferred outside vendors for custom cabinetry and other specialty fabrication. One project manager and superintendent oversee the entire build.
Ready to Start Your Henderson Kitchen Remodel?
If you have a Henderson kitchen that no longer works for the way you cook and entertain, we’d welcome the conversation. Our kitchen design-build process starts with a free in-home consultation — we walk the kitchen with you, discuss the layout and scope, and develop a realistic budget range before any design work begins.
Frequently Asked Questions
Henderson luxury kitchen remodels typically range from $80,000 for a mid-range full refresh to $500,000+ for a full custom kitchen with a working scullery and structural layout changes. The Lexington kitchen — our 2026 NARI Remodeler of the Year project — falls in the upper end of that range. Final pricing is developed during the free in-home consultation based on cabinetry, countertops, appliances, and any structural work involved.
If the kitchen remodel involves any change to walls, windows, or the home’s exterior — yes. MacDonald Highlands’ Architectural Review Committee reviews any structural change. If the kitchen is a cabinetry-and-countertop refresh that doesn’t affect walls or windows, HOA approval may not be required, but a permit through the City of Henderson Building Department still is for any plumbing or electrical work. Kingdom & Co. handles both submissions.
Most homeowners do, with a temporary kitchen setup somewhere else in the home (often a butler’s pantry, garage, or formal dining room). For projects involving major structural work or extended demolition, some clients relocate temporarily. We discuss logistics during the consultation phase so you can plan.
Yes. Custom cabinetry is one of the cornerstones of our kitchen work. We design every cabinet specification in-house — door style, wood species, finish, hardware, interior fittings — then partner with preferred cabinetry fabricators to bring those designs to life. The Lexington kitchen used custom Oakcraft cabinetry framed full-overlay in the Nantucket door style; the Lexington scullery used Kingdom & Co. custom cabinetry in Maple. Different fabricators, both custom-designed by our team.
Sub-Zero, Wolf, Miele, Gaggenau, and La Cornue are the brands we work with most often for luxury kitchens. Panel-front integration, hidden ventilation, built-in coffee systems, and warming drawers are coordinated during the design phase so the cabinetry layout reflects the exact equipment going in. We don’t push specific brands — we design around what fits your cooking style and budget.
In most homes, yes. Wall removals between the kitchen and adjacent rooms, island additions, and full layout reconfigurations are common scopes for our team. The Lexington’s kitchen was created by removing the walls between the original formal dining room, sunken bar, and old kitchen. Structural feasibility is assessed during the consultation phase — load-bearing walls, mechanical and electrical reroutes, and HVAC implications are all evaluated before design begins.
Yes. We handle the entire appliance process from specification through installation. During the design phase, we coordinate which appliances are panel-ready, which require ventilation routing, and how the cabinetry should be sized to fit the exact equipment. Some appliances — particularly Sub-Zero, Wolf, La Cornue, and certain Miele models — have long lead times, so we place orders early enough that the kitchen install schedule isn’t held up waiting on equipment.



















