Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

Charred timber lines this Thai bistro in Kuwait City by architect Rashed Alfoudari.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

Pendant lamps with copper insides hang from the ceiling of the Ubon restaurant above rows of black and white furniture.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

A kitchen at the rear of the restaurant is concealed behind a mirrored wall.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

We’ve only published a handful of stories from Kuwait on Dezeen, but you can see them all here, including a house that emits mist and a jewellery shop.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

Photography is by AOK.

Here’s some additional text from Alfoudari:


Ubon

Ubon is a Thai bistro located in the core of kuwait city.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

It overlooks Fahad Al salim street, a street well respected for it’s commerce back in the days.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

The space program of this bistro requires an efficient design for all of the kitchen, storage, and toilet areas; allowing for a spacious dining area.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

For this to be executed, the interior works where to be integrated with the existing structural elements in a harmonious manner.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

The Burnt wood panels, infused with the golden copper elements surround the dining area portraying the asian influence of this bistro.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

Pendant lights were added to soothe the dining area with their organic shape.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

Adding to their relevance is the inner golden color they diffuse, a color that had great impact on thai cultural ornamentation.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

Giving a visual continuity to the dining area where the wooden grains imprinted on the restroom’s concrete walls.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

The contrast in color and material here is then unified by texture.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

To continue the vertical pattern, the restroom was fitted with a suspended ceiling faucet along with an off-white standalone basin.

Ubon by Rashed Alfoudari

Architect: Rashed Alfoudari
Location: Salhiya, Kuwait City
Project Area: 60 sqm
Project Year: 2011

Capanna by K-studio

Capanna by K-studio

Greek architects K-studio have completed a rustic pizzeria modelled on an Italian courtyard in the centre of Athens.

Capanna by K-studio

Patterned tiles decorate the floor and a wall in the dining room of Capanna, which is furnished with vintage tables and chairs.

Capanna by K-studio

Reclaimed wooden shutters wrap around a mezzanine first floor, which projects over a wood-burning pizza oven and bar.

Capanna by K-studio

Ballpoint pen murals drawn by artist Joanna Burtenshaw decorate the walls of the staircase leading upstairs, where the shutters conceal the kitchen, toilets and a storage closet.

Capanna by K-studio

Other pizzerias from the Dezeen archive include one where diners can play their own music inside booths and another where colourful wall graphics illustrate possible topping combinations.

Capanna by K-studio

Photography is by Yiorgos Kordakis.

Here’s some more text from K-studio:


We send you images of our recently completed restaurant project, Capanna, a pizzeria / trattoria in Kolonaki, an area in the center of Athens.

The restaurant sits on the corner of Ploutarchou and Haritos street, where Haritos becomes pedestrianised.

Capanna by K-studio

When the weather is warm enough, which in Athens happens more often than not, the floor to ceiling windows can slide upwards allowing the restaurant to spill out onto the pavement.

Capanna by K-studio

The experience of eating outside was the starting point for the design of Capanna.

Capanna by K-studio

The aim was to render the space with the atmosphere of an Italian courtyard.

Capanna by K-studio

A pallet made up of materials familiarly found in these spaces such as cement tiles, stucco plaster, travertine stone, blackened steel railings, and characteristic narrow wooden shutters, was used to clad the different spaces in the restaurant.

Capanna by K-studio

The wood burning oven and the pizza bar are enclosed within a travertine stone box that sits in the far corner of the space framing the Pizzaiolo.

Capanna by K-studio

On top of it balances a rectangular volume, clad with reclaimed wooden shutters, enclosing the kitchen, storage and WC facilities.

Capanna by K-studio

The two shapes connect with a suspended steel staircase that penetrates them.

Capanna by K-studio

The floor is laid with grey cement tiles but in the double-height area of the restaurant geometrically patterned cement tiles create a carpet-like strip that continues onto the adjacent wall, emphasizing the height of the room.

Capanna by K-studio

The various vintage chairs add softness and a laid back feeling to the restaurant and the grey stucco plastered walls and ceiling help to enclose all of this in a textured, minimal envelope.

Capanna by K-studio

The combination of purposefully designed elements, reclaimed materials and vintage furniture, presents an architecture that sits comfortably between the bespoke and the sourced, creating an exciting and sociable atmosphere.

Capanna by K-studio

On the first floor mural artist Joanna Burtenshaw has illustrated the walls with biro drawings depicting the process of making fresh pasta, inspired by the traditional design of the restaurant’s tableware.

Dezeen archive: fast food restaurants

Dezeen archive: fast food restaurants

Dezeen archive: following our stories on Burger King’s rustic refit in Singapore and McDonalds’ new look in France, here are some more designer interiors for restaurant chains including Little Chef, Pizza Express and Austrian chicken shops. See all the stories »

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

Burger-King-Garden-Grill-by-Outofstock

Following our hotly debated story about the new-look interiors for fast-food giant McDonalds in France, here’s a revamped outlet for rival Burger King in Singapore that’s designed to imitate a garden. 

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

Like McDonalds, Burger King want to appeal to families with children as well as to teenagers, so commissioned design collective Outofstock to update their restaurants.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

The Burger King Garden Grill features a plant-covered trellis ceiling, exposed brick walls and plant-pot pendent lamps.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

The dining area is filled with stick-back chairs more usually found in English kitchens and metal-framed wooden dining tables inspired by camping furniture, while sofas upholstered with outdoor fabrics line the walls.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

Posters advertising food are displayed in pictures frames propped up on wooden shelves.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

More restaurants incorporating the new design are scheduled to open in Singapore and Japan in 2012.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

Other designer updates to fast-food restaurants include a Little Chef outlet by Ab Rogers and a chicken shop in Munich by Ippolito Fleitz Group.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

Here’s some more information from Outofstock:


“BK Garden Grill” by Outofstock

Burger King Asia-Pacific recently commissioned Outofstock to design a pilot restaurant in Singapore. The goal of the project was to create a new interior identity for Burger King. Some key points mentioned by BK was that they wanted a warm and welcoming store that would appeal to a wide audience – teens, young adults as well as families with children – the design should stand out but at the same time be accessible for the man on the street.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

We started off by analysing the BK brand, it’s advertising visuals as well as its history. We noticed that one word that kept popping up was “flame grilled”, and we used this clue as a starting point. From collective experiences, our mental picture of flame grilling is closely associated with garden barbecues and camping cook-outs.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

These activities, often held with groups of family and friends, left indelible memories in our growing up years. This led us to name the project “BK Garden Grill”, which is based on bringing the garden, as well as colours and textures of the outdoors into the restaurant.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

We wanted to remind people of the joy of communal dining with family and friends in a warm and natural atmosphere, evoking memories of BBQ parties and summer camps.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

We also aimed at created a more personable and flexible space, where potted plants can be neatly arranged or randomly placed on wooden ledges along exposed brick walls and glass windows. Framed marketing posters placed on these wooden shelves can be changed or moved about easily. More objects can be added to the fray with time as the restaurant develops its own story.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

Custom designed lounge seats and ottomans are upholstered with outdoor fabrics that are water repellent. The lounge seating area is set against a collage wall of materials and textures, most of which are applied throughout the restaurant, from raw concrete to clay bricks, wood veneers as well as cork, blackboard, copper and brass. BK’s branding and slogans can be applied in a more engaging way with this material wall.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

An overhead “roof” trellis takes visual attention away from exposed services such as air-conditioning and kitchen exhaust trunking while also acting as cable trays for pendant lamps and spot lights. We suspended clay, concrete and aluminum pots as pendant lamps to add to the garden atmosphere.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

We designed simple metal framed tables whose structure is reminiscent of foldable camping furniture, but being very strong and easy to clean. We sourced for a traditional stick-back chair to complete the look of the restaurant.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

The pilot store was officially opened during the recent BK Asia-Pacific Conference in Singapore and was met with generally positive feedback. More Burger King outlets based on our “Garden Grill” concept are currently being built in Singapore and Japan, and will be open by early 2012.

Burger King Garden Grill by Outofstock

Troll Wall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

The jagged glass edges of this restaurant by Norwegian studio Reiulf Ramstad Architects point up towards a sheer cliff face.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Named the Troll Wall Restaurant, the building is located at the foot of the tallest vertical rock face in Europe, in Norway’s Romsdal Valley.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Full-height glazing gives diners a view of the landscape, behind a criss-crossing pattern of structural beams.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Charred timber clads the elevations at the rear of the building, where additional rooms provide a local service and information centre.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Reiulf Ramstad Architects also completed a timber-clad nursery in Oslo this year – see our earlier story here.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Photography is by the architects.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Here’s some more text from Reiulf Ramstad Architects:


Trollwall Restaurant

It’s a new cursor at the foot of the Troll Wall; The architecture of the new visitors`center next to E139 is an outcome of the sites` close connection to the impressive mountain wall, Europe’s tallest vertical, overhanging rock face in The Romsdal Valley.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

The Romsdal valley has some of the tallest, sheerest cliffs in Europe and is a popular place for BASE jumping including “birdmen” jumping off cliffs in Wingsuits!

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

This location allows for an exciting setting for the new service- and information center.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

RRAs proposal is carefully planned in relation to the Troll Wall.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

At the same time it is building a character and identity which in itself will be an attraction in the region.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

The building has a simple, though flexible plan, with a characteristic roof that has its character from the majestetic surrounding landscape.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Geometry of the roof is also generated from the view to the mountains from the restaurant inside the building.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

These simple ways of design gives the building its character and identity that makes the Service center an eye-catcher and an architectural attraction in the region.

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Reiulf Ramstad Architects: Reiulf Ramstad, Sunniva Neuenkirchen Rosenberg and Espen Surnevik
Location: Trollveggen, Møre og Romsdal, Norway

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Program: New restaurant and service building
Client: Private

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Size: 700m2
Commission type: 1st price, Invited competition (2009)

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Status: Under construction
Year: Completed summer 2011

Trollwall Restaurant by Reiulf Ramstad Architects

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Circular mirrors, glowing acrylic rods and large yellows discs adorn the ceiling of this canteen for German magazine Der Spiegel (photos by Zooey Braun).

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Designed by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects, the dining room is located on the ground floor of the company’s headquarters in the Hafencity development of southern Hamburg.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Over 4000 of the satin-polished aluminium panels cover the ceiling, concealing electrical wiring and fittings behind.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Round lamps hang like upside-down mushrooms above each table and can be individually brightened or dimmed by diners.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

The suspended acrylic rods are arranged into curved rows to separate clusters of tables and are illuminated from above.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Painted blacks lines indent the white terrazzo floor to define walkways and discourage encroaching chairs.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Hafencity is a large development beside Hamburg’s Elbe River – other recent projects in the area include a concert hall by Herzog & de Meuron and a curvy apartment block.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Here’s some more information from the architects:


In October 2011 the SPIEGEL Group, whose stable includes Germany’s most important news magazine Der SPIEGEL, moved into its new publishing house in Hamburg’s HafenCity development. This impressive structure on the Eriscusspitze, lapped by the waters of the River Elbe, was designed by Danish architect Henning Larsen.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Ippolito Fleitz Group was commissioned to create a new employees’ canteen for the building. The legacy building’s famous canteen was designed in 1969 by Verner Panton and has since been placed under heritage protection. This inheritance represented a particular challenge.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Verner Panton’s canteen

Our deliberations began with a question: could we integrate Verner Panton’s iconic facility into a new concept? After careful consideration we decided against adopting the facility. One factor which spoke against redeployment was the polygonal format of the new building, where Panton’s square-based modular concept would inevitably lead to virtually uncontrollable spatial remnants.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Furthermore, the new building offers little in the way of large, continuous walls which are crucial to the Panton concept. The old building had three separate, compact spaces which Panton enlivened with the dynamic forms and colours of his ceiling topography. The new space, however, covers a large area and gives a strong horizontal impression. But above all it seemed logical to us to complement the new architecture of the building with contemporary, future-oriented interior design – exactly what Panton’s facility once was for the previous building.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Starting point

The employees’ canteen was and is a calling card of the SPIEGEL Group, reflecting its journalistic philosophy as much as its culture of dialogue – not least because of its prominent position in the building and its high visibility from the exterior. Nonetheless it is a space which looks inward, only accessible to SPIEGEL employees and their guests.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

That means it isn’t a “brand space” as such. The starting point for our deliberations was the characteristics of the space and of the building. The building distinguishes itself through its exposed position on the water and its modern architecture, expressed in the vertical interior space of the 14-storey atrium. The floor plan of the canteen defines a large, polygonal space whose strong horizontal emphasis is further highlighted by the uninterrupted row of windows on two sides.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Ceiling and light

Because the space had to be flexible, it was soon clear that the ceiling design would be the distinguishing moment of the canteen. Reflecting both this fact and the harbour location, we developed a matt shimmering ceiling which reflects light in much the same manner as water. It is formed of 4,230 circles made of micro-perforated satin-polished aluminium, laminated onto noise-absorbing supporting material and set at slight angles to each other. This means that the canteen’s natural light ambience reacts to its surroundings.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

During the day the ceiling is enlivened by water and light effects from the surrounding area. The matt shimmering “plates” absorb daylight and turn the roof into a lively, gently reflective complement to the water surface of the Ericusgraben canal. Large-scale light dishes use intense colour to divide the space into zones. This colour generates a positive atmosphere in the space, even on grey days. Dimmable lamps suspended directly above tables ensure that light levels are infinitely variable.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

In the evening the dishes are transformed into indirectly-lit light objects. The overall mood in the canteen is determined by the warm, white “ambient light” shed by the suspended lamps. Indirect light in selected suspended lamps discreetly illuminates the ceiling discs.Focussed downlights, hidden in the ceiling, complement the nuanced sophistication of the overall mood with light accents.Wallwashers integrated into the ceiling cast an even light on wall surfaces. They create a balance between horizontal and vertical illumination and optimise the sense of space by night, partly through reflections in glass surfaces.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

The ceiling also has functional advantages: the area above the ceiling plates is painted black, along with the mandatory technical fittings, rendering them invisible. Ceiling diffusers and sprinklers effectively disappear. In addition, the upper ceiling was configured to be noise-absorbent, complementing the acoustic properties of the micro-perforated plates.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

The space and its divisions

Despite the size of the space the visitor should never have an impression of monotonous, interchangeable, production-line construction. Rather the goal is to illustrate, in a dining context, the culture of dialogue which has flourished over the decades at SPIEGEL.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

The employees’ canteen is a meeting place, a place of culture and informal exchange of opinions. At the same time it should fulfil functional obligations such as accessibility and spatial clarity.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

The round, communicative tables are made from black coated steel frames which seem to grow from the floor in a graceful motion. Granite plates serve as table tops, their lasered surfaces working with the ceiling lights to create glare-free, brilliant light. The tables are placed within the space in three large groups in loose arrangements and so provide an organic counterpoint to the polygonal floor plan. Movement zones are thus clearly delineated.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Three lines are set into the smooth, white terrazzo floor: they ensure tables don’t encroach on walkways. Along these lines four areas are arranged with removable, lightweight spatial filters composed of white, hanging rods. Large yellow light dishes support the zoning of the space just as the hanging lamps locate tables within the space.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Wood panelling lends a sense of depth to structural hubs. The whitewashed, varnished surfaces appear even deeper thanks to a vertical, wavy relief which gives a textile-like effect.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Through a zigzagging glass façade a separate area can be formed at one end for discrete events or for use of the canteen late at night. A shoal of bright, hanging Plexiglas rods creates glare-free illumination and an intimate setting. The glass façade between this area and the canteen is formed of doubly reflective glass. So at times when both areas are in use, the separation is almost immaterial. However when the canteen is closed and thus darker, the façade appears half-mirrored, half-transparent.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

The employees’ canteen in the SPIEGEL Group’s new headquarters is a space that meets all functional demands while creating a strong visual impact to form a truly distinguishing space. In so doing it supports the mature culture of communication within the company and in a grand gesture transmits these values to the outside world.

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

A sprawling grid of timber cubes covers the ceiling of a restaurant in Singapore by designers Brewin Concepts.

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

The Fat Cow Restaurant is split into three equal sections, which comprise a bar and lounge, a dining counter and a set of five private dining rooms.

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

Diners enter the restaurant through a thick copper-covered door and approach each of the rooms through a curved corridor lined with illuminated glass blocks.

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

In the main dining room the wooden cubes evenly circulate overhead, while the grid extends more chaotically around the ceiling and walls of the lounge.

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

Randomly distributed light bulbs illuminate the timber cubes, which also provide the framework for shelves at the bar.

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

The restaurant occupies part of the ground floor of an 18-storey medical centre designed by Richard Meier – you can see more stories about the American architect here.

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

Restaurants filled with timber lattices have been popular in recent months on Dezeen – see our earlier stories about one with a woven net of bamboo across the ceiling and another with timber slats descending around the dining tables.

Here’s some more information from Brewin Concepts:


The Fat Cow Restaurant, Singapore

The layout of the restaurant is divided into 3 sections, the entry bar lounge, the private rooms, and the formal Shabu dining counter, each to have a capacity of 20 people. The main circulation spine is located along the curved edge of the restaurant, also the perimeter of the circular building plan.

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

This 12m long curved passage way is flanked by the existing glass brick wall on one side and a new curved wall on the other, with openings that lead to the respective 3 sections.

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

The exterior white 1m x 1m facade grid of the building inspired the internal three dimensional ceiling grid, present throughout the restaurant, broken into 50x50x50cm and 25x25x25cm cubes.

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

The grid provide lowered ceiling spaces that further enhance different areas in the restaurant, also serve as storage and display shelves in these areas.

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

The same grid pattern also inspired the movable partition screens in the private room area. Hung off a ceiling track system, the movable translucent screens provide flexibility to the 5 individual rooms to suit the space requirements for different size parties.

Fat Cow Restaurant by Brewin Concepts

Type: Japanese bespoke beef restaurant
Size: 3000 Sq Ft
Location: Camden Medical Center by Richard Meier
Designer: Brewin Concepts

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

Fast-food giant McDonalds have commissioned designer Patrick Norguet to redesign their restaurant interiors across France.

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

While the chain has come to appeal primarily to teenagers, Norguet wants to rebrand it as a place for families.

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

The space is divided by plywood cabinets, shelving and booths, and furnished with his own Still metal chair for Lapalma.

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

Customers can order at the counter or from digital terminals in family booths.

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

The neutral pallette is highlighted with orange and yellow metal storage boxes, plus red and dark green upholstery.

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

Other designer updates to fast-food restaurants include a Little Chef outlet by Ab Rogers and a chicken shop in Munich by Ippolito Fleitz Group.

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

Here are some more details from Patrick Norguet:


New interior design for McDonald’s restaurants in France by Patrick Norguet

Mc Donald’s has put Patrick Norguet in charge of designing the new architectural identity for its restaurants in France. A project which is exciting in terms of its scope as well as in its technical and sociological constraints since it concerned McDonald’s returning to its founding myth: familial fast food. If the brand was originally founded on the family, its image has little by little slid towards a more urban and adolescent tone. A return therefore to McDo’s DNA with this new interior design that Patrick Norguet, literally and figuratively, matches with getting back to roots.

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

The plant metaphor, with its branching development, this root common to the brand and to the family, is transformed here into an architecture which is transversal and expansive: birch plywood takes root and branches out in the restaurant in order to create areas, functions and moods for different social requirements without compartmentalising.

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

This organic and functional furniture/architecture offers several possibilities, several eating choices from eating standing up for lone teenagers, alcoves providing privacy to family table service, a small revolution at Mc Donald’s with digital control terminals integrated into the base and distributed throughout the restaurant. Henceforth, a mother can settle with her offspring at a table, order from a nearby terminal and wait for the meals to be brought to the table.

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

Patrick Norguet’s design, which as always hits the spot, uses contemporary white which he counterbalances with fun colours without falling for “toy” conventions like for example the storage elements with the painted metal boxes included in the base template. The luminous ambiance and the quality of the acoustics are exceptionally meticulous and offer customers a comfort which is rare today, whilst the quest for a certain radical nature is revealed through the choice of materials (plywood, sheet metal, concrete, etc.), tested in conditions of heavy passage to respond to the constraints of such a popular restaurant.

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

The designer is using his “Still” metal chair for Lapalma for the seats with a new high stool version specially designed for the occasion. The ceramic floor also designed by Patrick Norguet for Lea Ceramica immediately lends a distinctive tone to the venue. These huge, ultra-slim 2 metre slabs break with usual visual conventions: warm and graphic without being carpet, they change our habits in terms of flooring to create a brand new typology.

McDonalds by Patrick Norguet

Piloted at the start of the year in the Villefranche-de-Lauragais restaurant 40 km from Toulouse, the concept was immediately appealing and spoke volumes. 6 restaurants are currently in the pipeline throughout France.

Meat Liquor by Shed and I Love Dust

Meat Liquor by Shed and I Love Dust

A team of illustrators and graphic artists camped out for a week in this Rococo-style dome hidden under a carpark in Soho, London, covering every surface and arch with a sinister, sprawling illustration for new restaurant and bar Meat Liquor.

Meat Liquor by Shed and I Love Dust

Interior architects Shed of London and Singapore commissioned design collective I Love Dust to adorn the walls for food brand Meatailer, which is making the former Italian restaurant its permanent home after touring major festivals in the form of a partying burger van called the Meat Wagon.

Meat Liquor by Shed and I Love Dust

Referencing factories and butchers, Shed fitted out the interior with an industrial rubberised floor, an eight metre-long stainless steel bar and blood-coloured banquettes, plus industrial lighting hung from galvanised steel hooks and red cords.

Meat Liquor by Shed and I Love Dust

The restaurant opened to the public on 11 November.

Meat Liquor by Shed and I Love Dust

Other recent projects by Shed include the Harrods Shoe Salon, and flagship store for fashion brand Spencer Hart.

Meat Liquor by Shed and I Love Dust

Photographs are by Adam Luszniak.

Meat Liquor by Shed and I Love Dust

Here are some more details from Shed:


The Meat Wagon; a legendary food offer known by keen foodies and avid trend forecasters alike. The infamous burger van has globetrotted it’s way around any festival worth mentioning, spearheaded it’s own events and become synonymous with great food, delicious drinks and relentless parties. Now the legend continues, but instead of four wheels, it will be presented in a more permanent fixture.

When interior architects Shed first collaborated with the Meatailer enterprise, a design formula was created that would mean no two establishments would ever be the same; originality and nonconformity are at the heart of the Meat Wagon’s philosophy so all environments had to embody this ethos while taking on their own character.

The concept: to take an idea borne of location and environment and mince that up with the Meat Wagon’s utilitarian ‘no nonsense’ approach – all materials in their raw form, all elements explicit in their function.

Lurking beneath a car park just behind Oxford Street resided the perfect site for Meat Liquor – the Meatailer’s next venture. Previously the site of an Italian restaurant, the site was appropriately kitted out with an impressive Rococo style dome and a mass of ornate columns and architraves. So with this influence the idea came: a modern day mural to make Michelangelo weep, a ’tattoo’ that would envelop and intertwine with the obscurity of the building. A scene that would tell some of the Meat Wagon’s story so far and mutate the classical architecture into something far more appropriate to the Meat philosophy.

Shed commissioned the prolific design collective ‘I Love Dust’ to administer the monumental illustration. in just a week, a team of illustrators and graphic artists camped out on site to adorn as much visible surface as possible, with colourful tales from the Meat Wagon’s past, culminating in an extreme and almost hallucinogenic visual experience.

Red ‘liquor’ signs have been suspended in the windows to splay dull light over the dyed oxblood red, leather banquettes. Industrial cage lamps are hooked and gathered around galvanised steel hooks and suspended over blackened steel framed tables. Red cord is looped from the centre of the dome to reach salvaged industrial work lamps, positioned to highlight poignant images trapped within the trailing mural.

Industrial rubber flooring and an 8-metre long stainless steel bar with corrugated sheet façade resonate the sterility of a factory environment. Occupying the floor is a small army of vintage industrial seating, all powder coated in just two utilitarian colours. A length of ‘butchers’ curtains contains the lower level ‘Pit’; the Meat Liquor’s VIP area where guests can enjoy the thoughts of Hunter S Thompson that adorn the walls.

Shed are delighted to have had this opportunity to venture out of the realms of the corporate world. ‘A project like this comes up once in a lifetime. To have a chance to push boundaries of what may be considered indecent, inappropriate and down right wrong, and to have this concept whole heartedly backed by the client is one in a million. The history of the Meat Wagon has been the driving force behind every aspect of this project but what remains now is an entirely new beast.’

74 Welbeck Street,
London W1G 0AB

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

A stripy wall of light glows behind diners at this Milan restaurant by Italian architect Roberto Murgia.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

The dining room is located at the offices of law firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, who will also use the space for functions and exhibitions.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Thin strips of oak create the vertical bands across the illuminated wall, which comprises layer of both clear and translucent glass.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Paintings by Korean artist Minjung Kim decorate the wooden panels that line the remaining walls, while white tables and chairs furnish the room.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Randomly placed skylights create a pattern of bright rectangles across the ceiling, which are reflected in a white marble floor.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Two other interesting interiors we’ve featured at law firms are a translucent faceted waiting room and a corridor lined with individually CNC-milled parts.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Photography is by Giovanna Silva.

The following words are from Roberto Murgia:


Multipurpose Space for Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton

In a 1960’ Gio Ponti building right in the centre of Milan, the international law firm CGSH has expanded its existing offices, developing a multipurpose space in the basement of the building.

The main challenge of the project concerned the lack of direct sun light and the need to ensure appropriate sound and thermal insulation. Hence, the idea of realizing an external “light box” made of glass, with a wooden functional ring on the inside, so to leave out the existing structure and plants of the building. The outside structure defines the different rooms, serves as wall unit and creates roof-lights in the ceiling, that serve as vertical lighting system. The warm light coming from the roof-lights balances the cold light of the lighting wall where a wooden diaphragm filters and modulates the light.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Opposite the main entrance is the lighting wall, realized with two glasses, one opal, the other transparent, with thin plates of solid natural oak on the inside. The internal wood ring is made of framed wood panels, spaced by overhanging solid wood planking. The floor is a “battutto alla veneziana” from Fantini made of white lasa marble.

Great care has been paid to the environmental comfort, with special onsite productions to optimize the sound insulation and the light control with pre-set lightening scenarios depending on the intended use of the space.

The space can be used for multiple functions, such as conference and videoconference, cinema, restaurant and other dining events, and as a space for the exhibition of the art collection of the firm. In the pictures the work of Minjung Kim, ac renowned Korean artist.

The furniture is from MDF, the tableware from Bourulec for Alessi, the table furniture is from Ittala. A separate independent room is also included in the project.

Restaurant for CGSH by Roberto Murgia

Designers: Fabiola Minas, Roberto Murgia, Simona Oberti
Location: Milano, Via San Paolo
Country: Italy
Completion Date: 2011
Client: Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton
Floor Area: 300 Mq

Design Team: Filippo Weber, Valentina Ravara
Lighting Design: Rossi Bianchi Lighting Design


See also:

.

Niseko Look Out Cafe
by Design Spirits
Cocoro byGascoigne AssociatesInside award winner:
Table No.1 by NHDRO