79+ Japandi Kitchen Design Ideas That Make Small Spaces 

Japandi Kitchen Design

There’s a quiet shift happening in kitchen design right now  away from maximalist cabinetry and toward something that actually breathes. Japandi, the design philosophy that merges Japanese minimalism with Scandinavian warmth, has moved from niche blogs to mainstream renovation wishlists, and honestly, Japandi Kitchen Design it’s not hard to see why. The style solves a real problem: how to make a kitchen feel put-together without feeling cold, minimal without feeling empty.

If your kitchen currently feels cluttered, visually chaotic, or just kind of blah despite having decent bones  this approach is worth paying attention to. Japandi design works especially well in compact city kitchens, apartments with limited natural light, and spaces where you want the room to feel larger than it is. It’s about restraint with purpose, not deprivation.

Whether you’re renovating from scratch or just looking to refresh what you have, these 27 Japandi kitchen ideas are grounded in real-world layouts, material logic, and spatial thinking, not just aesthetics.

Flat Front Cabinetry in Warm Matte Tones

Flat Front Cabinetry in Warm Matte Tones

Flat-front cabinet doors are the foundation of Japandi kitchens  and not just because they look sleek. Without raised panels or decorative moulding, the eye travels across the surface uninterrupted, which makes even a small kitchen wall read as one continuous plane. 

In warmer matte tones like clay, greige, or muted sage, they avoid the sterile effect that high-gloss white can create. This setup works best in galley kitchens where visual simplicity reduces the feeling of being hemmed in on both sides. The problem it solves: busy cabinet fronts that chop up the space into visual noise.

Open Wood Shelving Against White Plaster Walls

Open shelving in Japandi kitchens earns its place when the shelves are solid wood  not wire, not painted MDF  mounted against a textured plaster or limewash wall. The contrast between the grain of the timber and the matte roughness of the plaster creates depth that paint colors alone can’t replicate. What makes this practical: you’re forced to edit what’s on display, which naturally reduces counter clutter.

 I’ve noticed this style works best in kitchens with good natural side-lighting; the grain reads flat under overhead-only fluorescents. It solves the “dead wall” problem without adding visual weight.

A Waterfall Island in Honed Stone

A Waterfall Island in Honed Stone

A waterfall island  where the countertop material drops vertically down the sides  creates a sculptural, almost furniture-like presence in the kitchen. In honed (rather than polished) stone, whether marble, limestone, or quartzite, the surface has a matte softness that fits the Japandi palette without feeling corporate. 

The vertical stone plane absorbs and diffuses light differently than horizontal surfaces, which adds visual dimension without adding furniture. This works well in medium to larger kitchens where the island is the room’s focal point. The honed finish also hides daily wear more forgivingly than polished alternatives.

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Recessed Handleless Cabinet Hardware

Push-to-open mechanisms or integrated recessed channels routed directly into the cabinet face  eliminate hardware entirely without eliminating usability. This isn’t just an aesthetic choice. Handleless designs make surfaces easier to clean (no hardware trapping grease or crumbs), which matters in a working kitchen.

 From a spatial perspective, removing hardware from the eye-line reduces visual fragmentation across cabinet runs. For renters who can’t replace cabinetry, recessed pull bars can sometimes be retrofitted to existing doors. Works best in lower cabinets where the integrated channel groove provides an ergonomic grip without strain.

Layered Neutral Palette With a Single Warm Accent

Layered Neutral Palette With a Single Warm Accent

Japandi kitchens resist both the all-white kitchen and the dark dramatic kitchen. The palette logic is: two or three very close neutrals, cream walls, oatmeal cabinets, soft concrete countertops  with one warm accent that introduces material richness. That accent is usually wood (a bamboo board, a walnut cutting block, rattan baskets under open shelves). It prevents the kitchen from feeling like a showroom while keeping the overall space from getting visually busy. The problem this solves is the “safe but forgettable” all-neutral kitchen that reads flat because everything is the same visual temperature.

Concrete or Limewash Feature Wall Behind the Range

Instead of a standard backsplash tile, a limewash or micro-concrete plaster panel behind the range creates a soft, textured focal point. Unlike tile grout lines, a plaster finish has no seams to interrupt the surface  it reads as one continuous plane, which reinforces the spatial calm Japandi design is after.

 In my experience, this works best when paired with a simple metal range hood with either a blackened steel or unlacquered brass finish  which acts as a considered industrial element rather than a decorative one. The problem it solves: visual busyness at the kitchen’s most active zone.

Under-Cabinet Warm LED Strips for Task Lighting

Under-Cabinet Warm LED Strips for Task Lighting

Overhead kitchen lighting is one of the most common design mistakes in compact kitchens. A single ceiling fixture floods the room evenly but creates harsh shadows on countertops where you’re actually working.

 Under-cabinet warm LED strips (2700–3000K color temperature) solve this directly: they cast light precisely where it’s needed, reduce the visual ceiling height, and make the countertop surface glow warmly in the evening. 

This is especially effective with natural wood or stone countertops, where directional light brings out the material’s depth. It’s a low-cost modification; most under-cabinet LED strips are adhesive-mounted and accessible for renters.

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Japandi-Style Kitchen With Shoji-Inspired Pantry Doors

Frosted or ribbed glass panels set into slim wood frames reference shoji screen aesthetics without literally reproducing Japanese architecture. Used as pantry or cabinet doors, they allow light to pass through while obscuring the contents  solving the “open shelving is too exposed but closed cabinetry feels heavy” dilemma. 

The ribbed glass diffuses light softly, which makes adjacent surfaces glow rather than cast hard shadows. This works especially well for floor-to-ceiling pantry walls where solid wood doors would make the room feel closed in. The problem it solves: visual heaviness in storage-dominant kitchen walls.

A Freestanding Wooden Prep Table Instead of a Built In Island

A Freestanding Wooden Prep Table Instead of a Built In Island

In smaller kitchens that can’t accommodate a fixed island without blocking movement, a solid wood freestanding prep table offers flexibility without sacrificing function. A table with an open lower shelf provides storage visibility; you can see what’s stored without opening drawers  and the table can be moved for cleaning, repurposed for dining when needed, or repositioned as the kitchen layout evolves. 

The furniture-like quality fits the Japandi ethos of treating functional pieces as considered objects rather than purely utilitarian items. Works best in galley or L-shaped kitchens with at least 36–40 inches of clearance.

Matte Black or Dark Bronze Tapware as a Focal Point

Tapware is often the last thing people think about in kitchen design, but it’s one of the most used elements in the space. A matte black or dark bronze gooseneck faucet introduces a grounded, non-reflective metal element that anchors the sink area without competing with other materials. 

Unlike chrome, matte black doesn’t amplify nearby reflections  so in a kitchen with stone countertops or textured plaster walls, the fixture reads as a quiet accent rather than a mirror. This is one of the most budget-effective ways to shift a standard kitchen toward a Japandi sensibility without replacing cabinetry.

Built In Spice Niche Beside the Hob

Built In Spice Niche Beside the Hob

A recessed niche beside the hob  even 4–6 inches deep and sized for small spice jars  solves a persistent functional problem: keeping cooking essentials reachable without cluttering the counter. In Japandi kitchens, the containers themselves matter. Matching wooden, ceramic, or labeled linen spice storage keeps the niche from looking chaotic. 

The niche also creates a small shadow line that adds depth to what would otherwise be a flat wall surface. For kitchens being renovated, this can often be built into stud wall space without structural modification. It solves the counter clutter problem at the most active cooking zone.

Japandi Kitchen With Pendant Lighting in Natural Materials

Pendant lights made from rattan, woven bamboo, paper, or undyed linen introduce natural texture overhead, a zone that’s often overlooked in kitchen design. The loose weave of natural fiber pendants also scatters light softly outward rather than directing it in a single beam, which creates a warmer, less clinical atmosphere than glass or metal alternatives.

 Hang pendants low enough that they pool light on the island surface (18–24 inches above the countertop is a practical range). This works best over islands or peninsula counters in kitchens with at least 9-foot ceiling clearance. The problem it solves: harsh overhead lighting that makes an otherwise calm kitchen feel like a workspace rather than a living space.

Shou Sugi Ban or Charred Wood Cabinet Accent

Shou Sugi Ban or Charred Wood Cabinet Accent

Shou Sugi Ban, the Japanese practice of charring wood to preserve it, produces a deeply textured, near-black wood surface with a matte finish that’s unlike anything synthetic. As a lower cabinet accent in a Japandi kitchen, it introduces deep contrast without the coldness of painted black cabinets, because the texture absorbs light rather than reflecting it. 

Used on a kitchen island or as a base cabinet run below white upper cabinets, the tonal contrast is striking without being aggressive. IMO this is one of the more underused ideas in Japandi kitchens outside of design-forward renovations; it has longevity because charred wood is genuinely low-maintenance.

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No Upper Cabinets  Wal Mounted Open Rail System Instead

Removing upper cabinets entirely and replacing them with a single wall-mounted rail system, a simple horizontal bar from which hooks, small baskets, and utensils hang  dramatically opens the wall plane and makes the kitchen feel taller. This works particularly well in kitchens with lower ceilings (under 9 feet) where upper cabinets already make the room feel compressed. 

The tradeoff is reduced enclosed storage, so this approach works best for cooks who use their tools daily and don’t need to store significant crockery. The problem it solves: the claustrophobic upper cabinet wall that makes small kitchens feel like they’re closing in.

Integrated Appliances Behind Panel Doors

Integrated Appliances Behind Panel Doors

Integrating appliances, refrigerator, dishwasher, sometimes even the microwave  behind matching cabinet panels is one of the highest-impact moves in Japandi kitchen design because it eliminates visual interruption across the entire cabinet run. Where a freestanding stainless steel refrigerator reads as a large appliance object, a panel-front fridge reads as a continuation of the cabinetry.

 The kitchen wall becomes coherent rather than a collection of different products. This is a renovation-level change, but the impact on spatial calm is significant. It works in kitchens of any size but matters most in small kitchens where each separate appliance competes for visual space.

Wabi-Sabi Ceramics as the Only Decorative Element

In Japandi kitchens, decoration is essentially eliminated  except for one category: handmade ceramics. A small collection of hand-thrown bowls, irregular vessels, or textured mugs on a single open shelf introduces the wabi-sabi principle of finding beauty in imperfection. 

These pieces work functionally and aesthetically simultaneously, which resolves the typical tension between a styled kitchen and a used kitchen. The irregularity of handmade ceramics also creates visual interest without pattern or color; the variation is in texture and form. This is especially useful in rental kitchens where you can’t change finishes: one considered a shelf of ceramics shifts the room’s feeling more than a new backsplash tile.

Low-Profile Linear Range Hood in Steel or Plaster

Low-Profile Linear Range Hood in Steel or Plaster

Standard range hoods are designed for function with limited attention to proportion. A linear, low-profile hood  either plastered to blend with the surrounding wall or in a flat brushed steel panel  integrates the extraction function into the architecture of the kitchen rather than imposing on it. 

The low profile keeps the hood within the cabinet height line, so the eye reads the wall as one horizontal band rather than being interrupted by a protruding appliance form. This works best in kitchens with induction or gas ranges in the 30–36 inch range. The problem it solves: an aesthetically dominant hood that draws attention away from the rest of the kitchen composition.

Tatami-Inspired Kitchen Mat or Natural Fiber Runner

A slim natural fiber mat  jute, sisal, or woven seagrass  placed in front of the main work counter or sink introduces the Japandi principle of functional softness. It cushions standing, reduces the visual hardness of tile or stone flooring, and introduces texture at floor level where material interest is rarely considered. 

The mat should be tight-woven and low-pile to stay practical in a kitchen environment; avoid thick rugs that catch crumbs. This is particularly effective in all-tile kitchens where the floor hardness contributes to acoustic harshness. A runner rather than a full rug keeps the floor plan visible and the space feeling open.

Two-Tone Cabinetry  Darker Lower, Lighter Upper

Two-Tone Cabinetry  Darker Lower, Lighter Upper

Two-tone cabinetry in Japandi kitchens follows a specific logic: the darker tone anchors the lower half of the room (which is appropriate, heavier things visually belong at ground level), while the lighter upper cabinets recede into the wall and ceiling. 

This matches how weight and mass are perceived spatially, making the room feel grounded rather than top-heavy. The division should align with the countertop line, not the middle of the room. 

Good combinations: warm charcoal lower + cream upper, muted navy lower + off-white upper, dark clay lower + pale stone upper. Works in any kitchen size but adds the most value in kitchens with generous cabinet runs.

Japandi Breakfast Nook With Built-In Bench

A built-in bench corner in the kitchen, even a small one, solves a persistent problem in open-plan homes: the kitchen needs to anchor a seating zone without competing with the main living area. A bench with a low round table creates a distinct dining area within the kitchen footprint without adding multiple chair legs to the floor plan.

 In Japandi terms, the bench is built in whitewashed or natural wood, the cushion is in a single-tone linen, and no additional ornamentation appears on the wall above. The table should be low enough to feel relaxed, not formal. This setup works best in kitchens with a bay window or corner light source.

Vertical Wood Slat Kitchen Island Facing

Vertical Wood Slat Kitchen Island Facing

Cladding the room-facing side of a kitchen island with vertical wood slats  rather than matching the cabinet finish  introduces material depth without visual complexity. The vertical orientation of the slats draws the eye upward, which elongates the perceived height of the island and, by extension, the room. 

The slats create narrow bands of shadow between them, adding texture that flat-panel surfaces can’t replicate. The contrast between the linear wood texture and the smooth stone countertop above it creates a considered material dialogue.

 This works on islands of any width but is most effective on surfaces wider than 48 inches where the texture has room to develop.

Japandi Kitchen With a Single Statement Live Edge Shelf

A single live-edge wood shelf  placed above the counter in a specific zone, typically beside the hob or above a drink station  introduces organic form into an otherwise rectilinear kitchen without committing to the maximalism of multiple floating shelves. 

The irregular edge reads as a natural material object rather than a constructed one, which creates warmth without decoration. Because there’s only one, it doesn’t compete with the cabinetry or create storage pressure. The items placed on it should be limited to three or four objects maximum. The problem it solves: the “too perfect” quality of fully rectilinear Japandi kitchens that can tip into feeling clinical.

Induction Cooktop Flush Mounted Into Stone Counter

Induction Cooktop Flush Mounted Into Stone Counter

A flush-mounted induction cooktop  installed so that the glass surface is level with the countertop  creates a continuous horizontal plane that’s visually and practically cleaner than a raised or drop-in unit. When the cooktop is off, the counter reads as one uninterrupted stone surface. 

When on, the active zone is defined by the heating rings without any raised lip to interrupt the line. This is one of those choices that rewards you daily: cleaning is easier, the counter reads as larger, and the kitchen has one fewer visible product element. Works with any stone or engineered surface; installation requires a precise cutout, so it’s a renovation-stage decision.

Minimal Kitchen With Shaded Task Lamp at the Window

In Japandi kitchens, lighting is layered  but at the individual task level, a single adjustable lamp near the primary prep zone or kitchen window introduces a domestic, human-scaled light source that overhead fixtures can’t replicate. A blackened steel or aged brass arm lamp with a simple shade does this without decoration. 

The lamp signals that the kitchen is also a place for careful, considered activity, not just high-speed food production. This is the kind of detail that reads as high-design in photographs but costs very little in practice. It works best at counter zones near natural light, where the lamp supplements rather than replaces the window.

Japandi Kitchen Featuring a Deep Single Basin Sink in Fireclay

Japandi Kitchen Featuring a Deep Single Basin Sink in Fireclay

A deep single-basin fireclay sank  the Japanese trough approach to the farmhouse sink  prioritizes function in a way that also happens to be visually resolved. One basin means no divider to interrupt the line of the sink, and the matte white fireclay surface sits between the organic warmth of stone and the formal cleanliness of stainless steel. 

The depth (typically 9–10 inches) accommodates large pots without splashing, which reduces the visual chaos of over-sink activity. The problem it solves: small double-basin sinks that feel cramped in preparation and create visual fussiness at the kitchen’s most active zone.

Muted Green or Moss Tone Cabinetry

Muted, complex greens, the kind that read almost gray in certain light, are the Japandi palette’s answer to color. Not the bright sage that dominated social media a few years ago, but a quieter, more mineral green: dried sage, tea green, moss. These tones work in Japandi kitchens because they have enough gray in them to coexist with stone and wood without competing. 

In 2026, designers are moving toward slightly more blue-green tones (eucalyptus, pale celadon) as the warmer greens become more common. The color performs differently across seasons  reading cooler in winter light and warmer in summer  which gives the kitchen visual dynamism without changing anything.

Japandi Kitchen With Folding or Sliding Pantry Doors for Visual Continuity

Japandi Kitchen With Folding or Sliding Pantry Doors for Visual Continuity

When a pantry is part of the kitchen footprint, standard swing-out pantry doors require clearance space that compact kitchens often can’t afford. Sliding or bifold pantry doors eliminate the swing arc, which frees up floor space and keeps the traffic path unobstructed. 

In Japandi terms, the door should be a flat panel with no moulding, no glass inserts  in the same material or finish as the surrounding cabinetry, so it disappears into the wall when closed. This creates the feeling of a continuous wall surface rather than a door in a wall. The problem it solves: a pantry that breaks the visual flow of the kitchen and creates a cluttered zone at the room’s perimeter.

What Actually Makes Japandi Kitchens Work

Japandi is often described as a visual style, but the design logic underneath it is primarily spatial and material. Here’s what separates the kitchens that read as genuinely calm from the ones that just look like they’ve been cleared of clutter:

Material restraint matters more than color. 

Most Japandi kitchens use three or fewer distinct materials: one for cabinetry, one for countertops, one for flooring. The design problem that this solves isn’t aesthetic, it’s cognitive. When every surface is made of something different, the eye has no resting point. Three materials, especially when they share a common tonal value (warm, cool, or neutral), allow the eye to move through the space without friction.

Proportion is doing most of the work. 

Flat-front cabinets look minimal partly because they’re minimal, but also because they’re often dimensioned with more care than standard cabinetry. Taller upper cabinets that run to the ceiling, lower base cabinets proportioned to counter height rather than standard box dimensions, and islands sized to the room rather than a standard product width  these proportional decisions create the sense that the kitchen was designed for the specific room, not installed in it.

Function organizes itself around the room’s natural movement. 

In a Japandi kitchen, the primary prep zone is typically beside the light source, the main storage is close to where items are used (not categorized by type across the room), and the sink zone is treated as a considered focal point rather than a utility area. This reflects the main principle from Japanese design, the idea that the space between things is as important as the things themselves. Applied to kitchen layout, it means leaving intentional clearance between zones rather than filling every gap with cabinetry.

Japandi Kitchen Design  Quick Reference

SetupSpace TypeKey BenefitPrimary Problem SolvedDifficulty
Flat-front cabinetryAll sizesVisual continuityFragmented wall surfaceLow
Open wood shelvingMedium–largeMaterial warmthDead wall spaceLow
Waterfall stone islandLargeSculptural focal pointBland island surfacesHigh
Integrated appliancesAny sizeSeamless cabinet runAppliance visual dominanceHigh
Two-tone cabinetryAny sizeVisual groundingTop-heavy or flat paletteMedium
Handleless hardwareAll sizesSurface cleanlinessHardware clutter + greaseMedium
Flush induction cooktopMedium–largeContinuous counter planeDropped-in appliance aestheticHigh
Under-cabinet LED stripsAll sizesTask lighting precisionOverhead-only harsh lightingLow
Freestanding prep tableSmall–mediumLayout flexibilityFixed island blocking movementLow
Vertical wood slat islandMedium–largeTexture + visual heightFlat, featureless island facingMedium

Common Japandi Kitchen Mistakes That Make the Space Feel Cluttered or Cold

Using too many “natural” materials at once. 

The temptation in Japandi kitchens is to add more natural texture: rattan, jute, exposed wood, stone, linen  until the room feels like a design showroom. The actual principle is the opposite: choose one or two natural materials and let them do all the work. A kitchen with oak shelving, jute runner, rattan pendants, bamboo cutting boards, and a live-edge island has too many textures competing for attention. Choose oak. Let the stone and plaster resolve the rest.

Selecting the wrong shade of white. 

Not all whites work in Japandi kitchens. Blue-toned whites (which read as cold) clash with the warm wood tones that anchor the Japandi palette. The whites that work are warm whites, cream, off-white, chalk  that harmonize with natural wood grain and matte stone. This is worth testing with actual paint samples in your specific kitchen’s light before committing.

Treating minimalism as emptiness. 

Japandi kitchens aren’t empty, they’re edited. A completely clear counter with nothing on it reads as uncomfortable in a working kitchen because it signals that the room isn’t actually used. The balance is one or two considered objects on each horizontal surface: a wooden cutting board, a small ceramic bowl with salt, a plant. Emptiness is not the goal; intention is.

Ignoring acoustics.

 Hard surfaces, tile, stone, concrete, and flat-front cabinetry  are acoustically reflective, which can make a Japandi kitchen feel louder than expected when in use. Adding a natural fiber mat, linen window treatment, or wood open shelving with fabric-lined baskets addresses this practically without compromising the visual palette.

Installing cool-white LED lighting. 

This is one of the most common mistakes in renovated kitchens. Cool-white LEDs (above 4000K) wash out the warm tones of wood, stone, and muted paint colors  which undermines the entire Japandi palette. Warm white (2700–3000K) is the correct temperature for this design approach in most kitchen zones.

FAQ’s

What is Japandi kitchen design? 

Japandi kitchen design combines Japanese minimalism  rooted in the wabi-sabi principle of finding beauty in imperfection and natural materials  with Scandinavian functionalism and warmth. In practice, this means flat-front cabinetry in muted tones, natural wood and stone surfaces, layered warm lighting, and a strong emphasis on spatial flow over decorative elements.

Does Japandi work in a small kitchen?

Yes  and in many ways, it works better in small kitchens than maximalist styles do. The design logic of Japandi (visual continuity, material restraint, intentional clearance between zones) directly addresses the problems of compact kitchens: visual busyness, cramped cabinet walls, and poor light quality. The key is choosing a maximum of three materials and treating empty counter space as a feature rather than a problem.

What colors are used in Japandi kitchen design? 

Japandi kitchens rely on warm neutrals  cream, oatmeal, greige, warm white  combined with one or two nature-derived tones: muted sage, clay, dusty blue-green, or soft charcoal. The palette avoids bright or saturated tones, instead prioritizing colors with gray or brown undertones that harmonize with wood and stone.

Japandi vs. Scandinavian kitchen: what’s the difference? 

Scandinavian kitchen design tends to favor light, airy spaces with white cabinetry, pale wood, and a focus on hygge  comfort and warmth. Japandi shares the warmth and functionality but introduces the Japanese emphasis on imperfect materials (handmade ceramics, textured plaster, wabi-sabi objects), deeper color tones, and a stronger spatial restraint. Japandi kitchens tend to feel more grounded and intentional; Scandinavian kitchens often feel more approachable and bright.

Is Japandi kitchen design expensive to achieve? 

Not necessarily. The style is defined by editing and proportion, not premium price points. A standard kitchen can shift toward a Japandi sensibility through tapware replacement, under-cabinet LED lighting, open shelving, a natural fiber mat, and editing surface clutter  all accessible at modest budgets. The higher-cost elements (integrated appliances, honed stone countertops, custom cabinetry) are optional upgrades, not requirements.

How do I add warmth to a Japandi kitchen without making it look cluttered? 

The most effective method is layering warm lighting first  under-cabinet LEDs and a pendant light in natural fiber  then adding one wood element to the counter zone (a cutting board, a small wooden bowl). Warmth in Japandi kitchens comes from material and light, not from accessories. Avoid adding multiple small decorative objects; one or two considered pieces perform the same function without introducing visual noise.

What flooring works best in a Japandi kitchen? 

Pale or mid-tone oak hardwood, wide-format natural stone tile (limestone or travertine), or large-format matte porcelain in warm neutral tones. The floor should be lighter than the lower cabinetry to keep the room feeling grounded rather than heavy. Avoid patterned tiles, which create visual competition with the simplicity of Japandi surfaces above.

Conclusion

A Japandi kitchen works because it’s built around decisions rather than additions. The visual calm these spaces produce isn’t accidental; it comes from deliberate choices about material, proportion, and light that resolve the most common problems: cluttered surfaces, harsh lighting, fragmented walls, and kitchens that look designed but don’t function well.

Start with one or two changes that fit your actual kitchen; the lighting is often the easiest entry point, followed by surface editing and a single material upgrade. Not every idea in this list will suit every space or budget, and that’s exactly the point of Japandi design: restraint is the strategy, not the limitation.

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