We want to buy a sink, but we do not know what to choose. A simple big sink, or a double sink?
The kitchen sink is one of the most used fixtures in any home, yet it is often chosen quickly, almost casually, after cabinets and countertops have already claimed most of the attention. And then the doubt arrives: should we go with one large, uninterrupted basin, or a classic double sink with two compartments?
This is not a purely technical decision. It touches daily habits, cooking styles, family rhythms, spatial aesthetics, and even how a kitchen feels to work in over many years. In well-designed homes, the right sink choice disappears into ease; the wrong one becomes a quiet daily irritation.
The Sink as a Daily Interface
Unlike statement lighting or sculptural backsplashes, the sink is not meant to be admired from afar. It is a tactile interface—where hands, water, dishes, food, and time converge. Whether you rinse vegetables, wash sheet pans, fill stockpots, or manage a steady flow of coffee cups throughout the day, the sink is constantly at work.
The question of single versus double is ultimately about how you want that work to feel: open and flexible, or structured and segmented.
