For years, integrating filtered water at home usually meant accepting something quite common: adding a small auxiliary tap next to the main one. It seemed like a logical solution. Until kitchens started to evolve.

Today, the water area brings together more functions than ever: washing, food preparation, storage, waste separation and even filtered water systems. As a result, many projects are rethinking how this space should actually be organised.
Because adding a second tap does more than take up a few extra centimetres on the worktop. It also requires an additional hole, introduces more visible elements and, in many cases, creates a solution that feels added afterwards rather than being part of the original design.
In compact, minimalist or open-plan kitchens, these small details often have a greater impact than expected.
That is why more and more projects are integrating both mains water and filtered water into a single fixture. Not because dual-outlet taps are new, but because they respond better to the way kitchens are designed and used today.
The trend is no longer about adding accessories around the water area, but about delivering more functions from a single point, with a cleaner, more comfortable and more coherent integration. And the more carefully designed the project, the more noticeable it becomes when every element has been considered from the very beginning.
At Frecan, we offer taps designed to integrate filtered water into a single fixture, adapting to kitchens where design, functionality and everyday use need to coexist naturally within the same space.
Discover our dual-outlet taps for filtered water and reverse osmosis systems.
Discover more
Cuándo tiene sentido (y cuándo no) integrar una máquina de hielo

Comentar