A kitchen in the tropics means grease, steam, condensation and temperatures up to 40 °C near the hob. Standard finishes (paint, wallpaper, drywall) cannot withstand this combination and need redoing every 6–12 months. Below — an engineering analysis: why this happens and how to close the issue once and for all for 15+ years.
Three Enemies of Kitchen Finishes in the Tropics
A tropical kitchen attacks finishing materials from three directions simultaneously:
- Cooking grease (aerosol) — when frying, oil breaks down into micro-droplets 0.1–10 µm in diameter that settle on the ceiling and walls within a 2–3 metre radius of the hob. On porous surfaces (paint, plaster, wallpaper) the grease is absorbed into the material structure and cannot be washed off
- Water vapour — boiling water, rice cookers and steamers generate up to 1.5 litres of steam per hour. At a background humidity of 80% any additional moisture causes condensation on the ceiling
- Temperature differential — hob zone: 38–42 °C. Air-con zone: 23–25 °C. A difference of 15–18 °C over 3 metres creates a permanent convective current that carries grease throughout the entire room
What Happens to Standard Finishes
- ❌ Emulsion paint on the ceiling — its porous structure absorbs grease aerosol. Within 3–4 months the ceiling acquires a characteristic yellow-brown tint. Impossible to clean — the grease has penetrated into the paint film. Repainting required every 6–12 months. More: Painting Walls in the Tropics — Money Down the Drain
- ❌ Wallpaper (any type) — vinyl lasts longer than paper but the seams still peel from steam. Under the wallpaper, condensation creates an ideal environment for mould. Plus the grease film on textured wallpaper surfaces won't wash off. Replacement: Wallpaper in Thailand — What to Replace It With Forever
- ❌ "Exposed concrete" plaster (microcement) — a trendy finish, but in the tropics microcement absorbs both grease and moisture. After a year — stains that cannot be removed without a full redo. Application cost: from 3,000 ฿/m². Redo cost: the same + demolition
- ❌ Drywall — the same story as in the bathroom: condensation → soaking → mould → sagging. Plus a grease film that makes drywall impossible to clean. More: Plaster vs Stretch Walls
The Solution: Vandal-Proof Kitchen Finishes
Ceiling: PVC Membrane
- ✅ Smooth non-porous surface — grease is not absorbed, it remains on the surface as a film
- ✅ Cleaning: soft cloth + soapy water. Full cleaning of a 10 m² ceiling — 15 minutes
- ✅ Does not absorb odours — PVC is chemically inert to cooking fats and volatile organic compounds
- ✅ Built-in lighting — LED spots or light lines are integrated into the membrane without additional boxes
Kitchen Walls: Porcelain Stoneware — The Only Honest Solution
In the kitchen, walls are constantly exposed to grease aerosol. Fabric (even synthetic with PU coating) is still a textile with a woven structure. Fresh splashes can be wiped off, but with systematic exposure to cooking grease the fabric will accumulate a grease film in its texture within 6–12 months. In terms of washability, fabric in the cooking zone is comparable to quality vinyl wallpaper — better than paint but worse than porcelain stoneware and PVC.
- ✅ Porcelain stoneware / large-format tiles — zero water absorption, grease stays on the surface, cleans with any detergent. The ideal solution for kitchen walls
- ✅ Stretch walls — appropriate in the living zone of a studio, beyond the 2–3 metre radius of the hob where grease aerosol has already dispersed. Here the fabric works excellently: does not absorb moisture, does not rot, conceals wall defects, 200+ textures
Kitchen Zoning: What Goes Where
| Zone | Load | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Ceiling (entire kitchen) | Grease, steam, condensation | PVC membrane (from 2,000–3,000 ฿/m²) |
| Kitchen walls (cooking zone) | Water, grease, high t°, aerosol | Porcelain stoneware / tiles (from 800–1,500 ฿/m²) |
| Living room walls (in a studio) | Condensation, minimal aerosol | Stretch walls (from 4,000 ฿/m²) |
| Floor | Water, grease, mechanical impact | Porcelain stoneware (from 800–1,500 ฿/m²) |
Kitchen Wall Materials Comparison
| Material | Washable | Absorbs Grease | Lifespan in Tropics | Price/m² |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emulsion paint | Partially | Yes | 6–12 months | 200–400 ฿ |
| Vinyl wallpaper | Partially | At seams | 3–6 months | 300–800 ฿ |
| Microcement | Partially | Yes | 1–2 years | 3,000–5,000 ฿ |
| Porcelain stoneware | Yes | No | 25+ years | 800–1,500 ฿ |
| LuxeSpan Stretch Walls | Partially* | Slightly* | 15+ years | from 4,000 ฿ |
| * Fabric with PU coating: fresh stains can be removed, but with constant exposure to cooking grease the texture accumulates residue. Recommended for the living zone of a studio, not the cooking zone. | ||||
The Studio-Kitchen Feature: Open Plan
In Thai condos, the kitchen is often combined with the living room. This exacerbates the problem: grease aerosol spreads throughout the entire apartment, settling on furniture, curtains and living-zone walls.
LuxeSpan solution: a single stretch ceiling across the full area of the studio (kitchen + living room). One seamless PVC membrane — washable in full, looks like a unified space. Zoning is achieved with light lines or level changes, not partitions.
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📐 LuxeSpan Engineering Brief
The chemical inertness of the PVC membrane to cooking fats is explained by its molecular structure. Polyvinyl chloride is a polymer with non-polar C–Cl bonds that virtually does not react with fatty acids (oleic, palmitic, stearic — the main components of cooking oils). The membrane's pH resistance ranges from 2 to 12, meaning compatibility with any household detergent — from acidic (vinegar, citric acid) to alkaline (baking soda, laundry soap). For comparison: emulsion paint (acrylic dispersion) has a porosity of 15–25%, which allows fatty acid molecules to migrate into the film structure via capillary forces. Once grease has penetrated to a depth of more than 50 µm, surface cleaning becomes ineffective — the yellow residue cannot be removed without a full repaint.