Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Original floor tiles were relocated to highlight seating areas during designer Laura Bonell Mas’ renovation of this Barcelona apartment (+ interview).

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Local designer Laura Bonell Mas completely refurbished the 100-square-metre apartment, located among the grid of buildings in the city’s Eixample district.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

She uncovered patterned tiles beneath newer ceramics and reused them throughout the property as they were in good condition.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

“All the hydraulic tiles in the apartment were there from the beginning,” Bonell Mas told Dezeen. “Most of them had been covered by a brown ceramic flooring for years, which probably explains why they were in a relatively good state.”

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Some of the tiles were kept in their original location, while others were relaid in other spaces to denote seating areas at angles to the walls.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

“We put back the tiles in the living room and dining room as they were before, and then we used the ones that had originally been in the corridor and entrance of the apartment for the carpets and paths,” said the designer.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Wooden boards frame the tiled areas and cover the remainder of the floor, except for large black tiles used in the kitchen and bathroom. Ceiling mouldings on the suspended ceilings were also restored where possible, along with the balcony doors.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

The rooms by the entrance were reorganised and partition walls removed to make the flat more open-plan. A walk-in cupboard was installed between the bedroom and hall to keep clutter hidden away.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

As the front door and hallway are positioned at an angle to the rest of the apartment, a curved shelving unit and desk were installed to remedy the awkward junctions.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

After noticing a few apartments in the Catalan capital that feature decorative tiles, we published a slideshow and roundup of our favourites. “Lately their popularity has gone up and when doing a renovation, finding beautiful pieces in a good state is almost like finding little jewels,” Bonell Mas said.

See more apartment interiors »
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Here’s our short interview with the designer about the history of tiles in Barcelona:


Dan Howarth: Did you move tiles from elsewhere in the apartment, or were they bought new to match the existing?

Laura Bonell Mas: All the hydraulic tiles in the apartment were there from the beginning, we didn’t have to buy any new ones.

Most of them had been covered by a brown ceramic flooring for years, which probably explains why they were in a relatively good state.

Nevertheless, we had to take them all out in order to reinforce the floor with a thin layer of concrete, as it is an old building, and the floors had some problems – some unlevelled parts and sound isolation in general.

So we put back the tiles in the living room and dining room as they were before, and then we used the ones that had originally been in the corridor and entrance of the apartment for the carpets and paths. In the rest of the rooms, the tiles were not very beautiful – maybe they had already been changed before.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Dan Howarth: Why were patterned tiles used in Barcelona apartments historically?

Laura Bonell Mas: Initially, these tiles were created as an alternative to natural stone for floorings. The fact that they didn’t have to be baked like ceramic tiling probably had an impact in their development.

Despite the fact that they were used in other Mediterranean areas, the hydraulic tiles seems to be found more often in Barcelona and the rest of Catalonia, and that is probably due to the art nouveau movement of Gaudí, Domènech i Montaner, Puig i Cadafalch, etc. In their search for a new architecture, decoration played an important part and hydraulic tiling was very versatile in terms of geometries and colours.

Their use went far beyond the age of modernism though, probably because the industry was already quite advanced by then. It has to be said that the more colours a piece has, the more expensive it is because it takes more time to do it. For instance, you can see that the flooring in the living room and the dining room is more noble or was at least more expensive than the ones in the corridor, which only have three colours and its geometry is far more simple.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Dan Howarth: Why are they still implemented today?

Laura Bonell Mas: Around the 1960s their implementation decreased and most of the factories that produced the pieces do not exist anymore.

But lately their popularity has gone up and when doing a renovation, finding beautiful pieces in a good state is almost like finding little jewels. New ones can also be used, even though they are quite expensive, but they don’t look exactly the same. They don’t look aged and the colours are much brighter. Also, because the colour has a four to five millimetre thickness, unlike painted ceramics, you can polish and lower them a little so that they have an even surface.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Dan Howarth: How do the tiles affect the atmosphere of a space?

Laura Bonell Mas: I think this kind of tiling affects the atmosphere in many ways. They always add colour, so using relatively neutral furniture and walls you still get a joyful result.

Their cold materiality is also important to note. We decided to combine the tiling with wooden floors, especially in the parts of the house that have little natural light, or none at all, to add some warmth. I think, as a result, the atmosphere you get in the bedroom or the study is completely different to that of the living room.

But mainly, I think this kind of flooring gives an aged kind of feeling. It seeks to maintain the old character of this kind of building but with a twist. The combination of old and new gives an interesting atmosphere to the space, and by recycling some of the existing materials, it also allowed us to reduce the expense in new ones.

Read on for Bonell Mas’ project description:


Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona

The project consists in the complete refurbishment of an apartment of about 100m2, in the Eixample area of Barcelona.

The geometry of its original plan layout responded to the building typology of the Eixample, with load-bearing walls parallel to the façade and the distribution of the rooms to each side of a long corridor. At the same time, though, it was partially determined by the fact that it is a corner building, which means that the entrance space is rotated 45º relative to the rest of the apartment.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas
Scheme isometric

The main strategy of the project was to enhance these different geometries to allow visual continuity and greater amplitude of space, by defragmenting the excessive compartmentalisation.

Partition walls were removed (bearing walls were not modified in any case) and the bathrooms and the kitchen were redistributed around one of the inner courtyards, so that the spaces or rooms are concatenated and the idea of a long corridor is destroyed. The needs of the client and future user, who would be living alone or with a couple, influenced decision making: less rooms, and bigger.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas
Floor plan before renovation – click for larger image

The presence of the original building components was especially important to preserve the atmosphere of an Eixample apartment. The suspended ceiling, with its existing cornices, was kept where possible, and the wooden balcony doors were restored. The windows that had to be changed and the interior doors that had no use anymore were recycled into the enclosures of a new piece of furniture.

The hydraulic tile floor, which had been covered for years with another ceramic pavement, was recovered and reattached following new guidelines: it is maintained as it was in the living room and dining room, while in the rest of the apartment it is combined with an oak parquet flooring, with the intention to create “carpets” that point out some of the liveable areas and suggest paths.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas
Floor plan after renovation – click for larger image

This old materiality is complemented with some made to measure furniture, which shows autonomy from the original structure with its curved shapes and directs the user through the space. These are various tables made with recycled teak wood and a big piece of furniture situated at the entrance of the apartment, and which has a double function of bookshelves and coat wardrobe on the outer side and closet for the master bedroom in the inner side. Its height emphasises the will of a fluid space as it doesn’t reach the ceiling, which allows the visual continuity of the structure of ceramic vaults and wooden beams, which in this part of the apartment was left uncovered.

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by Laura Bonell Mas
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O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Perforated metal screens conceal rooms and storage space in this Tel Aviv apartment by Israeli studio Paritzki & Liani Architects (+ slideshow).

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Paritzki & Liani Architects lined two walls of the 110-square-metre flat with hinged translucent panels to hide away everything except the kitchen counter and a sofa.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

“The idea was to thicken the existing walls with vertical perforated metal panels that may be opened and closed, forming a thick wall that contains functions of the habitat,” said the architects.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The walls open up to reveal kitchen units, the master bedroom and bathroom on one side of the main living space, and shelving along the other.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

These spaces remain obscured until lights within are switched on and the glow emanates through the panels.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Larger windows are left unmasked, but smaller ones are consumed by the screens or covered with similar translucent blinds.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Doorways and corridors leading from the entrance and into the bedroom are lined with the same wood as the floor.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Positioned in front of the bedroom, the bathroom sits right up against the panels but is still separated from the living area by large sheets of glass.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Elliptical lights suspended at different heights look like hovering UFOs and are reflected in the shiny ceiling.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

A walk-in wardrobe is located completely out of view behind the kitchen and an L-shaped balcony faces west to look out over the city’s skyline.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Also in Tel Aviv, Paritzki & Liani have squeezed a house with an exposed brickwork interior into a space between two existing properties and installed a PVC ceiling at an apartment to mirror a panoramic view of the harbour.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Photography by Amit Geron.

See more apartment interiors »
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The architects’ project description follows:


In an anonymous high-rise building, among many of those surrounding our skyline; we’ve decided to use the interior of this 110 sqm flat to elaborate, with simple elements, walls and lights, an experiment on the nature of perception.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The idea here is to thicken the existing walls with vertical perforated metal panels that may be open and closed; forming this way a thick wall that contains functions of the habitat (kitchen, closets, library, bathroom, storage). Above all, this wall is an optical device that transforms, depending on the type of light used, and modifies the height and depth of the space. In the light of day this thick perforated wall, composed of variable thicknesses, becomes a three dimensional veil that makes opalescent the different areas of the flat. Niches and deep spaces create visions of transitional forms.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Floor plan – click for larger image and key

In the dark we’ve drawn attention to a ritual passage, familiar to all of us, once we enter our home at night; the passage from darkness to illuminated space. Here we create a second view to the inhabitants. Our device adds new parts to the space, transforming itself into a remote architecture with new and profound windows: the vision exceeds the measurable borders of the flat.

The appearance of this new place vanishes once the lights are turned off.

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Paritzki & Liani Architects
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Bear Garage by Onion

The owners of a house designed to showcase their collection of toy bears have brought Thai design studio Onion back to extend the display cases into the garage (+ slideshow).

Bear Garage by Onion

Onion originally renovated the house at the Cha-Am Beach resort in Thailand to include cabinets for Be@rbrick ornamental bears and have now created a new exhibition area inside the garage for over seventy bears.

Bear Garage by Onion

The studio designed an L-shaped cabinet that takes up two walls of the garage, made from matte white laminated plastic and fronted with glass. “Be@rbrick cabinet brings light to Bear Garage,” Onion said. “It somehow transforms the entire space.”

Bear Garage by Onion

Faceted surfaces inside the cases extend outward to merge with the ceiling.

Bear Garage by Onion

Down the longest side, the height of the display space decreases from the top and bottom, plus the figures are spaced closer together towards the garage door.

Bear Garage by Onion

Paired with distorted black perspective lines across the sloping surfaces and progressively smaller shelves, the eye is tricked into thinking the bears increase in size.

Bear Garage by Onion

Each bear design sits on its own shelf with room to be accompanied by smaller versions, individually illuminated by an LED spotlight.

Bear Garage by Onion

Along the shorter wall, the bears are packed in tightly and shelves are spaced to accommodate different sized figurines.

Bear Garage by Onion

Additional strip LEDs are hidden in and behind the ledges. A large window allows the display to be viewed from the living room.

Bear Garage by Onion

More stories we’ve featured from Thailand include aerial photos that reveal the angular geometries of a rooftop swimming pool and a stairwell resembling a giant wedge of Swiss cheeseSee more architecture and design in Thailand »

Here is the project description from Onion:


Be@rbrick cabinet

In the longer part of the cabinet, Be@rbrick shelves are increasingly wider and further apart. Each shelf is individually customised. The first one, where Be@rbrick Detroit Metal City stands, has the same width as the 1000% Be@rbrick shoulder whereas the last shelf, where Daftpunk Be@rbrick is on display, is double that width. As an effect, the 1000% Be@rbricks queuing along on these shelves seem progressively smaller until its size is reduced by half at the corner of the space. The best viewpoint to perceive this is at the middle of the Garage where the cabinet elevation can be observed.

Bear Garage by Onion
Layout plan – click for larger image

The shorter side of the L-shape cabinet is a much simpler shelving system. The objective is to display as many Be@rbrick figures as possible. They stand close to each other and in continuity along the racks. Seventy figures at least are on display in this limited space of 4.8 metres high. It works as a background when the cabinet is observed from the diagonal viewpoint.

What unites the two design solutions is the idea of shopfront. The entire Be@rbrick cabinet is bright and white as if the toy figures are in luxurious window displays. LED strip-down-lights and LED strip-up-lights illuminate the shorter part of the cabinet. If the shelves are for 1000% Be@rbrick the number of strip-down-light will be more than those for 100% Be@rbrick. This is to uniform the illumination. For the longer part, there are two lighting systems, namely LED strip-down-lights and LED spot-lights. The strip-lights are between the ceiling and the rear wall. They are partly hidden from sight and partly shown through the edge of ceiling slope. Spot-lights are placed in the black square boxes that are increasingly larger in scales and in gaps through out to the corner of the space. Each light bulb precisely spots on each 1000% Be@rbrick. Lighting systems emphasise the effect of perceptual distortion.

Bear Garage by Onion
Elevation – click for larger image

Materials play an important part in the design. They are the matte white laminated plastic sheet, black mortises and transparent glass. On the frontal plane, the vertical mortises of six-millimetre wide are gradually spread out. These lines are the foreground of the cabinet. On the rear wall, a perspective of a room is drawn by using three-millimetre wide mortises. These thin lines are the pattern of conceptual depth. They make the cabinet appears deeper much less than set a background for the distortion of Be@rbrick size. Glass walls that envelop the entire cabinet has no frame. They are perpendicular. Again, the perception of Be@rbrick reflections is distorted at the corner of the room. Be@rbrick toys seem to have their double images that are thiner or fatter than themselves.

Be@rbrick cabinet brings light to Bear Garage. It somehow transforms the entire space. Cabinet ceiling that folds in various angles give shades to the whole Garage ceiling. Its steep slope extends itself from the inside to the outside of the cabinet. This darker shade of grey leads the gaze to a brighter space, that is Be@rbrick window display. Bear Garage, in this light, is far from being a car storage.

Bear Garage by Onion
Elevation

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by Onion
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Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects

Over a hundred peg holes puncture the walls of this currywurst restaurant in Vancouver by Canadian studio Scott & Scott Architects, creating spaces to store furniture, hold lighting and display art (+ slideshow).

Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects

Located in Chinatown, sausage and beer parlour Bestie is designed by Scott & Scott Architects to accommodate a showcase of locally-produced art and design, which can be hung in different arrangements from the 116 holes in the oiled spruce lumber walls. These holes can also be used for storing for extra bar stools – whose legs slot neatly into the gaps – or for hanging customers’ coats, hats and umbrellas.

Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects

A set of lights by Canadian designer Zoe Garred slot into holes above the dining tables. Seating is provided by wooden benches with brightly coloured cushions, designed to evoke the familiar look of typical highway restaurants.

Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects

Architects Susan and David Scott designed the restaurant so that owners Clinton McDougall and Dane Brown could build it themselves. “[It draws] on their shared love for matter-of-fact detailing of ad-hoc construction and high considered rational design,” they explained.

Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects

“The design uses common materials that can be worked with a few simple tools and a limited amount of everyday items that are repeated, allowing the work to be completed on site with minimal shop support,” they added.

Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects

The kitchen is exposed to diners and is lined with white ceramic tiles. It features an adjustable hanging system made from thin strips of copper, accommodating hooks for utensils, beer mugs and shelves.

Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects

A copper counter runs along in front alongside more of the wooden stools, which were created by Canadian designer Joji Fukushima.

Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects

Other details include a wooden cuckoo clock that is fixed onto one of the walls.

Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects

Scott & Scott Architects are based in Vancouver. Other projects by the studio include a remote snowboarding cabin on Vancouver Island.

Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects

Other restaurants and bars on Dezeen include a 1920s-style bar and brasserie in Basel, a restaurant and nightclub in a converted car park near Stockholm and a Parisian penthouse and bar containing chunky black trees.

Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects

See more restaurants and bars »
See more architecture in Vancouver »

Photography is by the architects.

Here’s some more text from Scott and Scott Architects:


Bestie Currywurst

Restauranteurs Clinton McDougall and Dane Brown open their highly anticipated currywurst restaurant Bestie this week in the heart of Vancouver’s Chinatown. The sausage and beer parlour is the first for the pair whose background is in art and design.

Architects David and Susan Scott designed the space around the owners’ desire to build the 25 seat restaurant themselves. The design uses common materials which can be worked with a few simple tools and a limited number of everyday details which are repeated to allow for the work to be completed on site with minimal shop support.

Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects
Bestie Currywurst floor plan – click for larger image

The project draws from the architects’ and owners’ shared love for both the matter-of- fact functional detailing of ad-hoc construction and for highly considered rational design. The work of fellow Vancouver designers is throughout the space including Zoe Garred’s Mariner lights and Joji Fukushima’s bar stools.

The loose tables and benches in the dining space allow for varied arrangement (film screening, communal dinners and removal) to facilitate changing events. The kitchen is fitted with a tool, stein and glassware hanging system that can be adjusted and added to over time.

The main wall will be an array of 116 holes and wooden pegs which will support an ever-changing rotating composition of locally produced design objects and art; coats and umbrellas; additional stools and pendant lights, and the odd copy of Der Spiegel.

Bestie Currywurst by Scott & Scott Architects
Bestie Currywurst west and north elevations – click for larger image

As with the stripped down and direct menu of German street food made with locally sourced ingredients, the space celebrates ordinary materials and simple details with oiled economy grade spruce lumber; copper hardware and counters. The floors and walls are painted in the eating hall as an easily maintained backdrop to the benches and coloured vinyl cushions that have the familiarity of the highway restaurants of our youth.

Location: 105 E Pender Street Vancouver, Canada
Opened: 17 June 2013
Area: 750 sq‘ (70 sq.m.)
Photo Credits: Scott and Scott Architects

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Scott & Scott Architects
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Aesop Midtown Installation by Hiroko Shiratori

Wooden chairs were piled on top of one another to create the shelves of this pop-up shop for skincare brand Aesop in a Tokyo shopping centre.

Aesop Midtown Installation by Hiroko Shiratori

Designed by Aesop creative manager Hiroko Shiratori, the Aesop Midtown Installation created a temporary store for the brand earlier this summer in front of a pair of elevators in the Tokyo Midtown Galleria.

Half of the chairs were turned upside down to create the stacks, which formed the display areas for rows of Aesop’s signature brown bottles.

Aesop Midtown Installation by Hiroko Shiratori

Quotes from various philosophers were inscribed onto the sides of a few selected chairs, plus some were still used as places to sit.

The space was completed by the addition of a wooden counter and a fully functioning sink.

Aesop Midtown Installation by Hiroko Shiratori

Dezeen interviewed Aesop founder Dennis Paphitis in 2012 about his brand, which regularly commissions designers to come up with unique concepts for stores. He explained: “I was horrified at the thought of a soulless chain”.

Other interesting branches include a Singapore shop with coconut-husk string hanging from the ceiling and a New York kiosk made from piles of newspapers. See more Aesop stores »

Aesop Midtown Installation by Hiroko Shiratori

Here’s some extra information from Aesop:


Aesop enjoyed a temporary residence in Tokyo Midtown Galleria from 24 April until late June, 2013.

Designed by Aesop Creative Manager Hiroko Shiratori, the interior employed utilitarian chairs in clever linear assembly to create makeshift walls, borders and shelves.

This transitory Midtown installation complemented the brand’s permanent signature stores in Aoyama, Ginza, Shin-Marunouchi, Yokohama and Shibuya. It offered a complete range of skin, hair and body care, and was fitted with a demonstration sink to facilitate the immersive sensorial experience for which Aesop is renowned.

Hiroko studied at the Royal College of Art and Chelsea College and Tokyo Zokei University. She has exhibited in London, Milan, Cologne and Tokyo and her work has been featured in Wallpaper, Casa Brutus, Domus Web, Axis and similar publications and sites.

Aesop was founded in Melbourne in 1987 and today offers its superlative skin, hair and body care products in more than sixty signature stores internationally. As the company evolves – new stores open soon in Hong Kong, London, and New York – meticulously considered and sophisticated design remain paramount to the creation of each space.

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by Hiroko Shiratori
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Living Kitchen

Designed for the not-so-distant future, the C3 kitchen goes beyond the confines of average appliances and basic food prep. Instead, it aims to build a personal relationship with the user through interaction with its widespread interface that reaches from corner to corner. Skip to the vid to watch it come alive!

Designer: Orlando Mendoza


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Shop CKIE – We are more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design!
(Living Kitchen was originally posted on Yanko Design)

Related posts:

  1. Kitchen for Entertaining, Kitchen for Living
  2. Night of The Living Kitchen
  3. World Kitchen “What’s Bubbling? Kitchen Tools!” Design Competition


    



Bread Table by Airhouse Design Office

The second bakery to feature on Dezeen this week is designed by Japanese studio Airhouse Design Office and features a tree growing out of its curved timber counter (+ slideshow).

Located in the central Japanese prefecture of Gifu, Bread Table by Airhouse Design Office is small bakery with a shop space and kitchen divided by a structural plywood display counter.

Bread Table by Airhouse Design Office

Cane baskets piled with loaves of bread and wire racks of pastries are stacked at intervals along the counter, while translucent polycarbonate corrugated sheets line the front and give off a pink glow when the room is lit up in the evening.

The same corrugated sheets have also been used to line a wall and the interior of the door, which features a chunky wooden handle.

Bread Table by Airhouse Design Office

“The plywood counter can be used for a variety of purposes such as a display space, checkout counter or a working space to cut bread and knead dough,” said architect Keiichi Kiriyama.

Bread Table by Airhouse Design Office

The kitchen and selling space were designed to have equal weight, with the large table-like platform counter between them.

“For this shop with a small-sized staff the design enables the owner to always have knowledge of the shop situation and allows different actions depending on how much bread is produced,” Kiriyama said.

Bread Table by Airhouse Design Office

“As a result this creates an open atmosphere, fosters communication between the customers and bakers, and displays the process from the time the bread is baked to the moment it is sold,” he continued.

The whitewashed walls are lined with simple wooden shelves on each side of the shop space, filled with plants and more baked goods.

Bread Table by Airhouse Design Office

Also included are low-hung lamps, timber floorboards, and two stripped wooden chairs for customers next to the glass window front.

Other bakeries featured on Dezeen include a Portuguese bakery with a ceiling design to look like dripping cake toppinga Suffolk bakery with a magpie’s nest motif set in the serving counter and a Melbourne bakery with the interior designed as an oversized bread basket.

Bread Table by Airhouse Design Office
Bread Table floor plan

Another Airhouse Design Office project on Dezeen is a converted warehouse in Yoro with a bedroom and bathroom hidden inside a white box.

See all stories about patisserie interiors »
See all architecture and design in Japan »

Photography is by Toshiyuki Yano.

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Airhouse Design Office
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Fish & Game Restaurant, Hudson: Zakary Pelaccio and Jori Jayne Emde make waves upstate with a homey new outpost

Fish & Game Restaurant, Hudson


Part of a growing community of entrepreneurs who have left NYC for greener pastures, husband-and-wife team Zakary Pelaccio and Jori Jayne Emde recently set up shop in Hudson, NY….

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Interview: Ford Atlas Designers Gordon Platto and Aileen Barraza : The ideations behind the next generation of pick-up trucks

Interview: Ford Atlas Designers Gordon Platto and Aileen Barraza


We’ve admired the 2013 Ford Atlas Concept truck since its debut at Detroit’s 2013 North American International Auto Show earlier this year. The Atlas makes a big statement about…

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Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini

This bakery in Porto by Portuguese architect Paulo Merlini has a wavy ceiling that’s designed to look like a dripping cake topping (+ slideshow).

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_1

Paulo Merlini installed the stripy ceiling to fulfil two key functional requirements: reducing glare from the overhead lighting and improving the acoustics inside the bakery.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_9

The wooden panels descend from the ceiling onto two of the walls, where shapes representing an abstracted version of the new logo designed by Merlini for the client become visible from certain angles.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_8

The interior comprises three separate areas with different seating arrangements so customers can choose the environment that best suits their mood.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_5

As well as the ceiling, the colour of the walls was also chosen to reinforce the visual reference to baked goods. “We picked the twenty most wanted products of the bakery and, based on a pattern of global identification, we found a middle tone and applied it on the walls,” says Merlini.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_18

Paulo Merlini has also designed a dentist’s surgery in Porto with a ceiling that resembles a gabled house.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_4

Baking fans will enjoy this bakery in Suffolk, England, with a bird’s nest motif set into the counter and this one in Melbourne, Australia, with undulating wooden slats on the walls and ceiling that resemble a bread basket.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_15

Photography is by João Morgado.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_3

See more cafe interiors »
See more architecture and design in Portugal »

Here’s a project description from the architect:


Before designing this project we visited and analyzed other similar spaces trying to find some errors that could be corrected. We found out that a basic error being committed was that most of these services only had one type of space. This design attitude ignored the variation of mood one feels during the day, or even if he walks there alone or with friends, needs a place to read a book or just wants to socialize.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_6

So, to bridge this flaw, we created three different environments so that the costumer can select the space that fits better to his or her mood, rather than have to adapt itself to an imposing environment. This way we provide a more emphatic place and consequently amplify three times the commercial potential.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_7

But a customer isn’t one till he gets in. How could we get him inside?

In a metropolitan style of life, everyday people deal with millions of inputs, like Billboards, Signs, People, Cars.etc. The way the brain deals with this excessive information is to send most of it to the unconscious mind, releasing the conscious from the excessive information.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_2

As one moves through the city the brain captures the information around and gathers all the similar inputs creating a mental “scenario” that, based on predictability is perceived by the unconscious mind, releasing the conscious to all variable inputs that he experiences outside that scenario. This is a surviving system that we inherited from the savanna era, so that if for example, a predator moved between the trees, without having to consciously capture every bit of information around, one could perceive the movement and react to protect their own life.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_10

Joining to this line of thought the known fact that 70% of those inputs are visual, and that humans as many animals have an attraction to light, we knew that we had to create an input that could distinguish itself from the rest of the city scenario in such a way that it could activate the conscious perception, guaranteeing that people would notice and feel attracted to it. For that we’ve used light as the main attraction.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_17

We studied the approximation of the observer to the space and realized that the most visually relevant plan from the exterior was the ceiling, and so we focused on that.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_12

In our studies we also realized that the use of direct light tends to heat up the space and create shadowed corners turning space into uninviting places and that, in an auditory approach, the excessive noise mainly resulting of the reverberating sound was not being properly solved.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_13

So, to solve these problems we knew we had to break the sound waves and refract the light. And so we did, by creating a second ceiling that results from the repetition of wooden stripes, we found a system that could solve the two problems in a row.

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In our research we found studies that prove that the presence of color and forms that are food-like actually makes people hungrier.

dezeen_Bakery in Porto by Paulo Merlini_19
Plan – click for larger image

So to get that input on the users, we picked the twenty most wanted products of the bakery and, based on a pattern of global identification, we found a middle tone and applied it on the walls.

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Section 1 – click for larger image

On the formal approach, we made the ceiling “melt” in some points to make it look like a cake topping.

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Section 2 – click for larger image

We also proposed a new logo to the client, and designed the space partially based on it. The wooden stripes descend through two of the walls creating an effect that dialogs directly with the consumer. When one moves through space realises that some hidden forms start to appear on the walls. Those forms are an abstraction of the proposed logo. The intention is to unconsciously reinforce the image of the firm in one’s mind.

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Section 3 – click for larger image

We like to think of our interventions as positive manipulation of the human brain. As such we focus on giving positive inputs to all the five senses (when possible) so that we can alter one’s homeostatic level, and as a result make people feel happier.

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Section 4 – click for larger image

The post Bakery in Porto
by Paulo Merlini
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