Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

Here are some photos of the recently-completed Nobis Hotel by Swedish architects and designers Claesson Koivisto Rune, where the Dezeen team stayed during Stockholm Furniture Fair.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

The architects renovated the interior of the two adjacent 19th century buildings that were originally used as residential apartments.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

The 201 guest rooms have been furnished with many pieces specially designed for the hotel, including the Baklava lamps featured in our earlier story.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

Photographs are by Åke E:son Lindman.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

More projects by Claesson Koivisto Rune on Dezeen »
More hotels on Dezeen »

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

The following informataion is from the architects:


Towards the end of the 19th century, every self-respecting city erected what it considered to be its biggest and best hotel.

It was usually named Grand Hotel and was more often than not paid for out of the private pockets of wealthy barons. These hotels are often still in use today and have a charm that maybe only a century-old ideal of quality can give.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

Today, such barons are rare and modern times do not allow an armada of Italian stucco carvers and French cabinet-makers to be called in.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

But is this why today’s boutique- and design hotels seldom succeed in creating a worthy equivalent to the atmosphere that pervades classic 19th century interiors?

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

Could it be the difference in style ideals; Neoclassicism versus Modernism? Or is it something else that is being missed?

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

These were some of the thoughts we had concerning what sort of interior spaces we wanted to create at Nobis Hotel. Amongst other things we concluded that an uncompromising attitude together with a certain amount of eccentricity was necessary. No detail was less important than another. And matching is not about an ever-present, repeated furniture model or colour rather it is about a consolidated personal selection.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

The entrance, lobby, lounge, corridors and rooms follow each other in a conscious succession where the character alters with every step.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

The extravagant Gold Bar, the French-inspired 24/7 bistro facing Norrmalmstorg, the Italian trattoria Caina on the floor below, the relax area entirely clad in marble and the conference section with its original wooden panelling preserved have each been given a distinctly different character.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

Despite the differences in character, each space flows into the next so that the spatial context is strong. Most of the work lay in making openings and spaces between the entrance, lobby, bar and ’living room’ – the generous lounge.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

For example, the joist floor structure, an old addition to the original building, was completely removed in order to recreate the full height of the original inner courtyard.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

The colour scheme and lighting design is also warm and subdued throughout. We call it Scandinavian dark blond. And as another recurring theme there are subtle patterns, in many cases derived from our own abstracted architectural drawings.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

Like the corridor carpeting and the wallpaper in the conference section. Or like the hand-milled wardrobe doors which sprang from the rooms’ curtain pattern. A pattern that is in turn a play with a plan of a gallery building in Kumla we had recently completed.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

Apart from the fixed interior features like, for example, the reception desk in rusted and waxed solid shipping steel, a large number of new furniture designs, textiles and lamps have been developed specifically for the hotel.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

One hundred and seventy individual designs are included in the final assemblage.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

About twenty were uniquely designed by us for this hotel and seventy more are variations of our earlier designs.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

Architecturally speaking, there are few more complex undertakings than a hotel.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

Our contribution to this project spanned approximately 20 months.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

During this time, besides continuous nursing, the general architectural concept was laid out, the planning and restructuring of the central communal areas around lobby, lounge and restaurants were made as well as the furnishing of 201 guest rooms of which there are 115 variations.

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

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Project name: Nobis Hotel
Address: Norrmalmstorg 2-4
Client: Nobis Group, Sandro Catenacci

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

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Architect: Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects
Contractor: Ebab
Total floor area: 8750 kvm

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects

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Year of construction of the south building: 1884-86
Year of construction of the north building: 1890-93
Re-construction year: 2010

Nobis Hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects


See also:

.

The Waterhouse at South Bund by NHDROStory Hotel by
Koncept
Baklava by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Örsjö Belysning

What Happens When by The Metrics

What Happens When by Elle Kunnos de Voss

Interior designer Elle Kunnos de Voss of American studio The Metrics has created the interiors for a restaurant in New York that will change every 30 days.

What Happens When by Elle Kunnos de Voss

Called What Happens When, the floor, ceiling and all the walls of the interior are painted black, whilst the furniture and light fittings are white.

What Happens When by Elle Kunnos de Voss

Architectural drawings and symbols have been painted on the walls and ceiling, and each time the interior changes it will be mapped out on the floor with tape.

What Happens When by Elle Kunnos de Voss

A grid of hooks on the ceiling mean the lighting can be constantly reconfigured.

What Happens When by Elle Kunnos de Voss

Music and entertainment in the restaurant will also change every 30 days, as well as the food and brand identity.

What Happens When by Elle Kunnos de Voss

As a Valentine’s Day installation, pink and purple triangles of fabric were hung from the ceiling.

What Happens When by Elle Kunnos de Voss

More restaurant and bars on Dezeen »
More interiors on Dezeen »

What Happens When by Elle Kunnos de Voss

Here’s some more information about the project:


What Happens When” / Interior Design by Elle Kunnos de Voss

The overall concept for the space is a ‘work in progress’ transparency into the design process as the architectural drawings are mapped out onto the dining room surfaces in 1:1, with each Movement change red lined to manifest the process and record the transformations.
Within this frame work we will design; a new lighting scheme and fixtures, unique spatial elements to create variations of visual compositions like perspective, scale and form and a new color scheme for every 30 day Movement. To keep the space flexible for the changing light and spatial installations we have designed a grid of hooks for the ceiling.

What Happens When by Elle Kunnos de Voss

1st Movement

SPACE / Elle Kunnos de Voss

The spatial concept for the First Movement is a monochromatic landscape of deconstructed volumes and fixtures, using a paired down aesthetic. White lines define volumes within the space, describing archetypal house and ladder shapes in a distorted perspective. The deconstructed chandeliers take their cue from a classic chandelier with cut cardboard prisms and large globe light bulbs.

FOOD / John Fraser

For the debut month Chef Fraser is serving a hearty, Nordic and Northern Germanic influenced menu which includes first courses such as Potato Skins with wheat beer fondue, pickled sausage and sorrel, Oysters with beet mignonette, sunchokes and arugula and Arctic Char with fennel aspic and preserved lemon and second courses such as Cod “Stew” with dill, squid ink and clams and “Hunter’s Plate” comprised of pig parts, bitter greens and bread dumpling.

What Happens When by Elle Kunnos de Voss

BRAND / Emilie Baltz

The branding system developed below uses a system of iconography to represent every month of What Happens When. Each month, a new icon will represent the brand, creating a playfully abstract visual language that has potential for multiple meanings. The application of the brand icons will be flexible, translating easily into uses like urban tags that will serve as artistic means of advertising.

What Happens When by Elle Kunnos de Voss

SOUND SCAPE / Micah Silver

Sound artist and curator Micah Silver has developed an evolving aural environment throughout the entire space. As with the design and menu, this will radically shift around shared inspirations each month. The January composition is a two hour long work that comes in and out of perceptibility and presence, an evolving landscape within which a meal and conversation can unfold in unique ways. Over the course of two hours the ear is guided through the range of human hearing. Among the source materials or sound ingredients used are “Snow slowly covering plastic foliage brought to Walden Pond in Concord, MA”, “Recordings extracted from YouTube videos made at rural bonfires.”, and the sound of orchestras warming up. From the entryway to the bathrooms, the entire experience is considered as a time-based event which can be composed for, enhancing the dining experience with sound. With speakers placed throughout the dining room, entryway, and bathrooms, the soundscape creates a connection between Fraser’s food, a sense of time, and the sense of place.


See also:

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Design Bar by
Jonas Wagell
Hel Yes! temporary
restaurant
Nomiya temporary restaurant by Pascal Grasso

PAC House by A+R Arquitectos

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

Portuguese firm A+R Arquitectos installed this staircase with floating wooden treads and a zig-zag hand rail as part of the renovation of a Portuguese house.

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

Called PAC House, the three-storey project has parking and the entrance on the ground floor, kitchen, dining living room and bathroom on the first floor and bedrooms at the top of the staircase.

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

Photographs are by Nelson Garrido unless otherwise stated.

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

More staircases on Dezeen »

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

More extensions and renovations on Dezeen »

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

More residential architecture on Dezeen »

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

More photography by Nelson Garrido »

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

The following information is from the architects:


From the original building, localized in a context of a consolidated but chaotic city, we valued the stone masonry walls and the spatiality of the envelope.

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

The new objects added inside suggest the clear reading of these limits which they tend not to touch.

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

The intervention goals are twofold: to preserve the original character, through a careful balance between old and new; and to create living conditions compatible with contemporary habits.

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

PAC House by A and R Arquitectos

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See also:

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Heliotrope Raising by
Bang Architectes
51A Gloucester Crescent by John GlewVol House by
Estudio BaBO

Corner project by Guise

Corner project by Guise

Swedish interior designers Guise have inserted these tall black free-standing cabinets throughout a Stockholm apartment.

Corner project by Guise

Top photograph is by Jesper Lindström

Called Corner project, the cabinets provide storage space and divide the apartment, which has no interior walls.

Corner project by Guise

Above photograph is by Rasmus Norlander

The units come in three different sizes and are all of the same height.

Corner project by Guise

All functions are housed within the pillars, including the kitchen sink.

Corner project by Guise

Photographs are by Mathias Nero unless otherwise stated.

Corner project by Guise

More interiors on Dezeen »

Corner project by Guise

Above photograph is by Jesper Lindström

More apartments on Dezeen »

Corner project by Guise

Above photograph is by Jesper Lindström

More furniture on Dezeen »

Corner project by Guise

Here’s some more information from Guise:


PROJECT BRIEF
The assignment was to redesign an apartment of 45 m² from 1900 on Jungfrugatan in an exclusive area in central Stockholm.

Corner project by Guise

Above photograph is by Jesper Lindström

The client’s request was to create storage space as well as giving the apartment a unique identity.

Corner project by Guise

CONCEPT
The main concept is based on breaking up the traditional sequence of rooms and functions to become a nonlinear and nonhierarchical arrangement of space.

Corner project by Guise

The previously strict spatial segregation, with kitchen, living room and bedrooms have been broken up by introducing a forest of columns that define the rooms.

Corner project by Guise

Since the apartment has no walls in the traditional sense, the spatiality is created by the pillars relationship to each other rather than by clear physical boundaries.

Corner project by Guise

PLANNING
The apartment is inscribed in a square of around 45 square meters. The entrance door is located in one corner of the plan, facing one of the apartment’s two windows.

Corner project by Guise

Above photograph is by Jesper Lindström

The previous plan had a wall that strict shared the apartment in the kitchen and living area. A small alcove was positioned close to the bedroom.

Corner project by Guise

All the existing walls were torn down and replaced with a forest of columns that separates the rooms from each other.

Corner project by Guise

Above photograph is by Rasmus Norlander

Even the bathroom walls have been torn down, the toilet is housed in one of the columns, providing necessary privacy.

Corner project by Guise

Above photograph is by Rasmus Norlander

Also the WC-pillar is freely positioned and is thereby able to be, like all other columns, walk around.

Corner project by Guise

Above photograph is by Rasmus Norlander

All the functions associated to the apartment is housed inside the pillars.

Corner project by Guise

Above photograph is by Rasmus Norlander

The positions and size of the pillars derives from functional aspects. All volumes are specially produced for this project goes from floor to ceiling.

Corner project by Guise

The sizes of the pillars vary from 400×400, 600×600 to 800x800mm. The height is 3050mm for all pillars except the bathroom module.

Corner project by Guise


See also:

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Home 07 by
i29
Apartment in Paris by Pascal Grasso ArchitecturesFifth Avenue Shoe Repair by Guise

Nothing Happens For A Reason

Tobias Rehberger’s mind-bending optical illusions take up residence at a Finnish cafe

nothinghappens1.jpg nothinghappens2.jpg

German artist Tobias Rehberger likes to shake things up. Since stepping on the scene 15 years ago, he’s turned to a variety of mediums to toy with perception, consistently challenging his audience to see the “things which cannot be seen.” His latest work transforms the interior of a cafe in Finland’s cultural capital Turku into a mind-boggling display of criss-crossing lines, an installation he conceived in collaboration with Artek.

nothinghappens3.jpg

Logomo Cafe, as it’s called, is the second collaboration between Rehberger and Artek, and a more subdued extension of the first. In 2009 the creative Finnish design studio tapped Rehberger to draw on the decorative WWI “razzle dazzle” style of painting to create a “visually disorienting environment” for the cafeteria at the Palazzo delle Esposizioni. Debuting at the Venice Biennale, the dizzying array of harsh black and white stripes and contrasting geometric furniture made for a Beetlejuice-like effect, winning him a Golden Lion award.

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While the Logomo installation draws on a similar palette and stripe-obsessed sensibility as the cafeteria, this time Rehberger came up with a more airy design, using longer lines throughout the space, extending them onto the windows and accenting only with neon orange.

The Rehberger installation will be on view through 18 December 2011 at the Logomo Cafe in Turku, Finland.


Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG

Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG

Designers Studio XAG have created a window installation in London for French fashion designer Christian Louboutin, spelling out the brand name in bright neon lettering. 

Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG

The window is furnished with a neon arrow and an array of backlit oversized perspex letters decorated with bulbs.

Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG

Shoes by Louboutin are perched on the letters.

Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG

Photographs are by Susie Rea.

Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG

Other projects by Studio XAG on Dezeen »
More window installations on Dezeen »
More fashion on Dezeen »

Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG

Here’s some more information from the designers:


Christian Louboutin: Mount Street Boutique, Neon Graveyard.

Take a stroll down down London’s Mount St & be dazzled by studioXAG’s latest window.

Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG

Gorgeous shoes & handbags sit amongst giant lit letters spelling out Christian Louboutin. Each letter has it’s own story to tell & can be traced back to original Vegas signage.

Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG

After a lot of typographical experimentation we laser cut a 1:10 scale models in acrylic to get a real understanding for proportion, lighting configuration and colours.

Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG

After much fine adjustment we went into production. We had metalworkers fold, roll and weld the stainless steel shells.

Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG

The lights are a mix of Pygmy and Golfball bulbs, 4 different colours of neon, backlit perspex and crystal Cabochon.

Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG

To make sure the window all came together beautifully each letter was powder coated in a rich, bright and glossy colour to match a shoe or a bag in Christian Louboutin’s current collection.

Christian Louboutin Mount Street Window by Studio XAG


See also:

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RCA graduates in Harvey Nichols windowsMaison Hermès Window Display by Tokujin YoshiokaClockwork Snow by
Tjep.

Ralph Appelbaum Associates Selected to Design Exhibits for National Museum of African American History and Culture

0416adjaye.jpg

Beside a sprinkling here and there of random bits of news, the Freelon Adjaye Bond/SmithGroup-designed National Museum of African American History and Culture is in that pre-construction, still-planning period where there isn’t a whole lot to talk about until it starts to take form (it’s currently set to break ground sometime next year and be completed in 2015). However, this weekend marked some new word on the interiors of the museum, the commission for which has been handed to Ralph Appelbaum Associates, who will create all of the exhibitions for the museum, covering, as the Washington Post reports, roughly 82,000 square feet of space. If you’ve been to a museum, particularly in DC, but really any museum and almost anywhere in the world, you’ve likely seen the firm’s work. They’ve designed exhibitions inside the Newseum, the Natural History Museum, the New York Public Library, and temporary installations like Volkswagen‘s traveling Autostadt from a few years ago. While there are till several years to go, nice to get the occasional peek at the progress of one of the Smithsonian‘s largest new museum projects in recent history.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Design Bar at Stockholm Furniture Fair by Katrin Greiling

Design Bar at Stockholm Furniture Fair by Katrin Greiling

Stockholm 2011: German designer Katrin Greiling created the Design Bar at this week’s Stockholm Furniture Fair, featuring these orange cardboard hoods suspended over wooden loungers.

Design Bar at Stockholm Furniture Fair by Katrin Greiling

The project also included a pineapple-shaped bar and piles of cushions lashed together with rope.

Design Bar at Stockholm Furniture Fair by Katrin Greiling

See Jonas Wagell’s Design Bar for last year’s fair in our earlier story.

Design Bar at Stockholm Furniture Fair by Katrin Greiling

Stockholm Furniture Fair continues until 12 February. See all our coverage of the event here »

Design Bar at Stockholm Furniture Fair by Katrin Greiling

Here are some more details from Stockholm Furniture Fair:


Cultural diversity at the Design Bar

Stockholm Furniture Fair and Northern Light Fair have commissioned industrial designer and interior architect Katrin Greiling to design 2011′s Design Bar and VIP Lounge. She is inviting visitors on a journey with references to a multitude of cultures.

Design Bar at Stockholm Furniture Fair by Katrin Greiling

“The Design Bar and VIP Lounge for 2011 will not follow any linear narrative; they will instead be a hybrid that is impossible to define.

Design Bar at Stockholm Furniture Fair by Katrin Greiling

The exhibition space, which covers 320 m², contains references to different cultures influenced by all my global experiences and impressions.

Design Bar at Stockholm Furniture Fair by Katrin Greiling

From a narrative perspective I am creating an accessible landscape that calls to mind the genuine European, the old town, but which also conjures up an artistic idiom characterised by cultural diversity that harks back to my time in the Middle East,” explains Katrin.

Design Bar at Stockholm Furniture Fair by Katrin Greiling

Her design draws on different visual styles that encourage the visitor to become a part of the interior and be enticed into a game of perception. The interior deals with the private and the public in a way that calls into question our concept of seclusion and how we react to space and status. Cardboard and plywood are recurring materials that are combined with a poetic projection of the actual content.

Design Bar at Stockholm Furniture Fair by Katrin Greiling

Katrin Greiling is an industrial designer, interior architect and photographer who hails originally from Munich. She founded Studio Greiling after completing a Masters in Interior Architecture and Furniture Design at the University College of Arts, Crafts and Design in Stockholm, and she now works with clients including Askul, OFFECCT and Graniph. She has won several awards and has exhibited at events such as Wallpaper Handmade in Milan 2010, as well as Salone del Mobile in Milan, 100% Design in London and Swedish Style in Tokyo.

Design Bar at Stockholm Furniture Fair by Katrin Greiling

The purpose of the Design Bar, which is a combined exhibition and bar, is to highlight a Swedish designer or group. On previous occasions the bar has been designed by architectural practice Marge, design group Front, design duo BrobergRidderstråle, the duo Save our Souls, the design collective Camp Site, and most recently Jonas Wagell. The Design Bar is now sharing space with the VIP Lounge in the newly-constructed part of Hall A/East entrance.


See also:

.

Bidoun series
by Katrin Greiling
Ananas by
Study O Portable
Pentaphone by
Robert Stadler

Núñez House by Adamo-Faiden

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Argetinian studio Adamo-Faiden have installed a fabric tensile structure across the roof of this renovated apartment in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Called Núñez House, a tent-like structure between the walls at the top of the building creates a shaded covering over the terrace and swimming pool.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

A light airy social area has been created at the top of the house, where the kitchen, living and dining rooms all flow out to the terrace, separated from it by glazed walls.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

The rest of the apartment has been completely renovated, with the bedrooms spread over one floor and a rooftop swimming pool made from an old water tank.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Photographs are by Cristobal Palma.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

More projects by Adamo-Faiden on Dezeen »

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

More residential extensions on Dezeen »

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Núñez House.

The realized work for the Núñez family consisted of the transformation of an old apartment into a contemporary urban home.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

The project resumes four punctual operations that try to set a relation between the existent organization and the new function.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

The first one is the inversion of the separate uses of the two floors of the house.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

With the addition of a bathroom and a closet in place of the former living room, the goal of placing all bedrooms on first floor is achieved.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Which, in turn, liberates the upper floor and its terrace for a functional common space for the whole family.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

The second intervention consists of occupation of half of the terrace with a light construction, which integrates the space with the kitchen, dining area, and living room.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

The rooftop of this space is used to create an extension that leads to the third operation: convertion of the water tank into an open-air swimming pool.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Finally, a shadow device incorporates to the project the irregularity of the walls from neighboring buildings, trapping a great volume of air and creating an specific atmosphere for the new house.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

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Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

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Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

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See also:

.

House in Kodaira by
Suppose Design Office
Origami by
Architects Collective
Casas Lago by
Adamo-Faiden

New Room by Nuno Capa

New Room by Nuno Capa

Portuguese studio Nuno Capa have completed the interiors for a hair salon in Braga, Portugal, featuring translucent curtains to partition the space into smaller zones.

New Room by Nuno Capa

Designed for hairdresser Pedro Remy, exposed concrete features throughout the New Room salon and the areas requiring a bit more privacy are divided using corrugated metal.

New Room by Nuno Capa

Double height curtains running on circular tracks enclose workstations to create semi-private booths.

New Room by Nuno Capa

The salon also functions as a training academy.

New Room by Nuno Capa

Photographs are by Rui Pires.

New Room by Nuno Capa

More salons on Dezeen »

New Room by Nuno Capa

More fabric interiors on Dezeen »

New Room by Nuno Capa

Here’s some more information from the graphic designer João Loureiro:


New Room is the latest space of the Portuguese hairdresser Pedro Remy. Hosted in the city of Braga, this innovative space designed by the architect Nuno Capa, it’s contemporary and minimalist.

New Room by Nuno Capa

Aiming to keep sight of the initial construction raw elements such as structural elements in concrete, these dialogues with the intervention of new fixed elements, ensuring the visual balance of a relaxing, comfortable and informal environment. It promotes the spatial fluidity for those who circulate, giving a special and different character to the workroom.

New Room by Nuno Capa

Alongside innovation, New Room offers an extensive menu of hairdressing and aesthetical services, targeted to customers who worry about their image and looking for new trends.

New Room by Nuno Capa

Our stylists are internally trained by our own academy to ensure a high quality service, always directing their attention to the customer’s life concept, personality, personal habits, appearance and hair type. This workspace is also a training academy, aiming to support all hairdressing and make-up professionals.

New Room by Nuno Capa

In the schedule is already a plan for continuous and quality training in the area of new methods and practical techniques. The business training in management of hairdressers, leadership and motivation of teams, marketing, among others, will enhance the diversity of educational knowledge offer, differentiation factors and enhance today’s professionals.

New Room by Nuno Capa

We advocate an equal degree of knowledge for all professionals, in order to glamorize this as one of the most important artistic interventions in the area of beauty that comes with the past, present and future of human civilization.

New Room by Nuno Capa

New Room is a new change, modernity and sharing knowledge for everyone’s future. We want to maximize the value of the concept and lifestyle for all our customers.

Project: New Room
Client: Pedro Remy
Architect: Nuno Capa
Design: João Loureiro


See also:

.

kilico. hair salon by
Makoto Yamaguchi
Nagi by Eiri Ota and
Irene Gardpoit Chan
Boa Hairdressers Salon by Claudia Meier