Kitchen Concepts, Inc. owner wins design award

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Marilyn Terlouw is a certified kitchen designer and member of the National Kitchen and Bath Association, which she credits for allowing her the opportunity to work on projects with companies like Maytag. (Matthew Shepard/Daily News)

“After I design it, I take in all the experts that will be doing all the installations, Terlouw said. Randy (her husband) goes. He will look at the structure, and make sure that everything I drew and designed  is going to work.The electrician will go and look at all the elements with electricity to see if we need to add more to the (electrical) box. Then the plumber goes along, and he looks at all the heat, cooling, and plumbing aspects.”

She also has a flooring expert and a painter survey the location.

Terlouw experienced many changes over the years.

“I started off in my home and then moved into a different home where I had my own showroom attached to the house,”  Terlouw said. “I have been in this location, in downtown Newton, for 13 years.”

Terlouw and her husband fell into a problem, like many residents in Newton, when Maytag left. She often did designs for them, and the loss hurt her business, but she never gave it up.  Last year, they decided to make their home at their business. Their location has an upstairs with a marvelous view, which Terlouw loves.

“The recession really hurt us,” Terlouw said. “I designed their (Maytag’s) sets for photography, for brochures and for literature. They were a good client. When they shut down, it was a huge impact on my business. Paying a mortgage was also not fun, so we decided to move upstairs and downsize.”

Maytag recognized  her skill sets because of her certification through the National Kitchen and Bath Association.

She had her work published in the various publications, and she is very proud to have her designs showcased.

“It is kind of fun to be able to see your work in a national level,” Terlouw said. “I think it was for three years, I had my own ‘ask the expert column’ for Century 21 Magazine. The magazine went to homeowners that purchased a certain level home within their company. That was a lot of fun to do.”

Designing, however, was not Terlouw’s first career choice.

“I started off teaching preschool at Head Start in Ames,” Terlouw said. “The part I loved teaching was the creative part — the art , the storytelling and the puppetry. Every opportunity I had, I redecorated my apartment and I made things. People kept encouraging me that I should do that for a living.”

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