Why Your Kitchen Needs a Multipurpose Sink

Most kitchen sinks do one thing: hold water while you wash dishes. The Nano Waterfall Workstation Sink does considerably more. By embedding a sliding track system directly into the basin walls, it transforms the space above the water into usable prep area — something a standard sink simply cannot do.

You gain a cutting surface directly over the drain, a colander that sits at the perfect height, and a dish rack that doubles as a drying station. If your kitchen is tight on counter space, this rethinking of the sink footprint makes a material difference in how you cook and clean.


Key Features

Each feature below contributes to daily usability rather than just the spec sheet.

  • Waterfall Flow Mode — The wide, low-pressure curtain of water covers more surface area with less splash. It is better for rinsing delicate greens, fruit, and seafood than a high-velocity jet, and it keeps your countertops dry.

  • PVD Nano Coating — The matte black finish uses physical vapour deposition, the same process used in aerospace components. After a month of daily use with cast-iron pans and sharp knives, the surface showed zero visible scratches. Water and oil bead off instantly.

  • Workstation Accessories — The included solid-wood cutting board and stainless colander sit securely on the rails, do not rattle, and are both dishwasher-safe. The cutting board has a juice groove that channels runoff directly into the sink.

  • Digital Temperature Display — A small LED on the faucet shows the water temperature in real time. It is particularly useful when preparing baby formula, tempering chocolate, or brewing pour-over coffee where precision matters.


At $349, it is priced above entry-level sinks but well below luxury plumbing brands. If you are already planning a kitchen update, the workstation upgrade is worth the premium.