French Range vs. American Range: What’s the Real Difference — and Which One Is Worth It?
If you’re designing a serious kitchen, you’ve probably landed on this question: French range or American range? Both sit at the top of the appliance market. Both cost serious money. But they are built differently, configured differently, and represent fundamentally different philosophies about what a kitchen is for.
This guide is not about criticising one category to promote another. At L’Atelier Paris, we offer open gas burners and induction alongside our Coup de Feu — because precision cooking means having the right tool for every technique. The real difference isn’t the cooking surface. It’s what you can build around it.
What Makes a Range ‘French’?
The term ‘French range’ refers to a style of professional cooking appliance rooted in the commercial kitchens of France. It is defined not by a single feature, but by a philosophy: the range is designed as a permanent architectural element of the kitchen, built to an individual specification, and intended to last a lifetime.
French ranges are characterised by:
- Heavy-gauge steel and cast iron construction - built for permanence, not replacement cycles
- Fully bespoke configuration - stone countertops (marble, quartzite, or granite), hardwood or stone flooring, handcrafted tile backsplashes.
- Professional or bespoke appliances - size, cooktop layout, oven type, colour, and trim all chosen by the buyer
- Handcrafted or semi-handcrafted assembly - not mass-produced on an automated line
- A design philosophy that treats the range as kitchen architecture, not an appliance
- Generational longevity-a range designed to be passed down, not traded in
Design and Construction: Where the Real Difference Lies
The gap between a French range and an American range is most visible not in the showroom, but in how each is made and specified.
| Details | L’Atelier Paris French Range | Retail American Range |
|---|---|---|
| Construction | Handcrafted in Georgia, USA; heavy-gauge steel body; cast iron components; quality-controlled individually | Factory-manufactured; lighter-gauge steel; modular, standardised components |
| Cooktop options | Coup de Feu (French top); open gas burners; induction; or any hybrid combination — configured per order | Open gas burners, electric, induction, or dual-fuel; configuration is fixed at purchase |
| Sizing | Fractional-inch sizing — built to your kitchen’s exact dimensions; 32” to 157½” | Standard sizes only: 30", 36", 48"; kitchen must be built around the range |
| Exterior | Signature Collection (16 colours), any RAL (300+ colours), or custom paint to sample; 11 trim finishes | Limited: typically stainless steel, black, or white; 1–2 trim options |
| Quality control | Individual quality control per range; each unit is reviewed before shipping | Production-line QC; standardised tolerances across thousands of identical units |
| Lifespan | 30–50 years with standard maintenance; designed as a permanent fixture; 10-year warranty | 10–20 years typical; replaced as part of kitchen renovation cycles |
| Lead time | 8–14 weeks (US manufacturing); faster than European imports | In stock or 2–6 weeks |
Cooking Performance: Precision Across Every Surface
This is where the conversation often gets oversimplified. The Coup de Feu is a unique and powerful cooking surface — but it is one of several options available on an L’Atelier Paris range, not the only one. The right configuration depends entirely on how you cook.
The Coup de Feu (French Top)
The Coup de Feu provides managed, radiant heat across a 3-panel system. It excels at slow cooking, sauce work, braises, and anything that benefits from controlled, even heat over a wide area. A cook manages temperature by moving pots across the surface rather than turning dials — a fundamentally different technique that experienced cooks find intuitive and precise.
It takes 5–10 minutes to reach full temperature, depending on which plate is needed and it is best suited for kitchens where it will be used regularly. Clients who cook on it consistently report it becomes indispensable within weeks.
Open Gas Burners
L’Atelier Paris ranges offer open gas burners with the same precision and BTU output as the best professional equipment available — not the retail-grade burners found in standard luxury American ranges. High-heat cooking, searing, stir-frying, and rapid boiling all perform at a professional level. Gas burners can be configured alongside a Coup de Feu on the same range, or specified as the entire cooktop.
Induction
L’Atelier Paris offers induction as a cooktop configuration. Our induction system delivers the precision and responsiveness of professional-grade induction — faster and more controllable than retail induction cooktops. It can be specified as the full cooktop or combined with open burners or a Coup de Feu in a hybrid layout. If induction is a priority, it is fully available without compromise.
Customization: Unlimited Configuration vs. a Fixed Catalogue
This is the clearest and most meaningful difference between a French range and a retail American range.
L’Atelier Paris: configured, not selected
Every L’Atelier Paris range is built to an individual specification. The configuration choices include:
- Width — fractional-inch sizing from 32" to 157½” (both La Provençale and La Grande Cuisine Professionnelle )
- Cooktop layout — Coup de Feu, open gas burners, induction, or any hybrid combination
- Oven configuration — single or dual; convection, traditional, or combi; any combination across models
- Custom depth — La Provençale at 26"; La Grande Cuisine Professionnelle at 31½"
- Colour — 16 Signature Collection colours (matte or gloss), any RAL colour (300+), or custom paint to sample
- Trim finish — 11 options including Brushed and Polished Gunmetal, Copper, Chrome, Nickel, Brass, and Burnished Brass
Nothing about the final product is standard-issue. The range is designed for your kitchen, not the other way around.
Retail American ranges: the catalogue model
High-end American ranges from Wolf, Viking, or Thermador offer genuine quality and performance. But the specification is fixed: you select from available sizes (typically 30", 36", or 48"), choose a fuel type, and pick from a small number of finish options. The configuration cannot be changed. For homeowners whose kitchen demands something outside those parameters — a specific width, a specific colour, a non-standard cooktop layout — a retail range cannot deliver it.
Price: What Does a Luxury French Range Actually Cost?
French ranges occupy the upper tier of the luxury appliance market. Here’s a realistic price guide:
| Range type | Price range (USD) | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Entry-level La Provençale (32"–48") | $14,000–$20,000 | L’Atelier Paris La Provençale 800–1200; Lacanche Cluny |
| Mid-range La Provençale (48"–63") | $20,000–$35,000 | L’Atelier Paris La Provençale 1600; La Cornue Château 150 |
| Large La Provençale (79"–102") | $35,000–$65,000 | L’Atelier Paris La Provençale 2000–2600 |
| La Grande Cuisine Professionnelle (110”–157½”) | $65,000–$100,000+ | L’Atelier Paris La Grande Cuisine Professionnelle 3800 |
| Premium American range (36"–48") | $5,000–$20,000 | Wolf DF486G; Thermador PRG486WDH |
The price difference is real — but so is the value proposition. An L’Atelier Paris range is purchased once, backed by a 10-year warranty, and designed to last 30–50 years. Amortised over a lifetime of use, the cost-per-year gap narrows considerably. More importantly, it is never replaced — which means no future renovation, no disposal cost, and no design compromise the second time around.
L’Atelier Paris vs. La Cornue vs. Lacanche: A Quick Comparison
If you’ve decided on a French range, these three brands are the primary options available in the US market:
| Details | L’Atelier Paris | La Cornue | Lacanche |
|---|---|---|---|
| Made in | USA (Georgia) | France | France |
| Customization | Fully bespoke — fractional sizing, unlimited colour, 11 trim finishes, any cooktop configuration | High — colour and some configuration options | High — wide colour palette, cooktop configurations |
| Cooktop options | Coup de Feu, open gas, induction, or any hybrid | Coup de Feu and open burners | Open burners; Coup de Feu on select models |
| Starting price | ~$14,000 | ~$20,000 | ~$10,000 |
| Sizes | 32”–157½” (fractional-inch) | 35"–69" | 35"–71" |
| Warranty | 10 years | Varies | Varies |
| US showrooms | NY, Miami, LA, Dallas | Limited US presence | Dealer network |
| Lead time | 8–14 weeks (US-made) | 16–24 weeks | 12–20 weeks |
| Best for | Maximum customization; US-made; large format; generational investment | Heritage buyers; French-made statement piece | Entry-level French range; French-made at lower price |
Who Should Buy a French Range?
A French range is the right choice if:
- You are building or renovating a kitchen once, and want it to be the last kitchen you ever design
- You want the range to define the kitchen’s architecture, not complement it
- Customization matters: a specific width, a specific colour, or a cooktop configuration that no retail catalogue offers
- You cook regularly and want professional-grade performance - gas, induction, Coup de Feu, or a combination of all three
- You entertain frequently and want a kitchen that makes a permanent statement
- You are making a generational investment - a range to be handed down, not traded in when the next renovation comes
A French range is probably not the right choice if:
- You need the range delivered in under four weeks
- Your kitchen is already built around fixed 30" or 36" appliance openings with no flexibility
- Budget ceiling is under $10,000
Not sure which range is right for you? Talk to our design team