Showing posts with label RESTAURANTS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RESTAURANTS. Show all posts

Patka Restaurant by El Equipo Creativo, Barcelona



In the Quechua language of Peru Pakta means “union”; in this case the union of two cultures and their respective cuisines . The interior design created by El Equipo Creativo emerges from this same idea, considering that Japanese cuisine is the basis of the nikkei gastronomy but wrapped in Peruvian tastes, colours, traditions and ingredients. With this in mind, the basic elements of the restaurant such as the bars, the kitchen and the furniture are designed with a clear reference to the architecture of the traditional Japanese taverns.
An explosion of colours evocative of Peru envelopes the space. This chromatic “second skin” is achieved by use of a direct reference to the Peruvian loom, offering a surprising combination of colours which contrast with the austere Japanese design, and underlining the deep-rootedness of this artefact in Peruvian arts and crafts. However, the re-interpretation of the Peruvian loom goes further, sequencing its own elaboration process on the walls of Pakta, transforming this flat surface to offer a tridimensional character to the space, adding vitality and movement and blurring the limits which mark the locale. The traditional Peruvian weaving looms are wooden mechanisms where colored threads intertwine in various directions, forming a suggestive tridimensional space which generates an attractive atmosphere transformed and reinterpreted in Pakta.
The final result unites the re-interpretation of these two cultures--Peruvian and Japanese-- by means of some of their most emblematic traditional elements, creating a visually potent but balanced solution, at once spontaneous and rational, hilarious and silent, surprising but strangely familiar, as is the nikkei cuisine itself.







Ask Italian Restaurant by Gundry & Ducker


 Ask Italian restaurant Gundry and Ducker at Bluwater, Greenhithe - UK

Ask Italian restaurant  by Gundry & Ducker at Bluewater, Greenhithe – UK.. - See more at: http://designcreme.blogspot.gr/2013/06/ask-italian-restaurant-by-gundry-ducker.html#sthash.lqYr9XNb.dpuf
Ask Italian restaurant  by Gundry & Ducker at Bluewater, Greenhithe – UK.. - See more at: http://designcreme.blogspot.gr/#sthash.F6QTqHNE.dpuf





Beach Hotel La Plage Casteldelmar, Corsica



La Plage Casadelmar is first and foremost about the beach. It is also a hotel with a holiday home feel nestling in an unspoiled natural setting. Totally renovated in 2012, it comprises three villas and a main building, a swimming pool and a private white sand beach. The hotel exudes an atmosphere of absolute refinement, but La Plage Casadelmar's greatest luxury is its location.
Located just an hour and a half from Paris, Corsica and Porto-Vecchio abound in natural wonders. From the sublime turquoise of the sea and the stunning paradise beaches to the dazzlingly hued mountain peaks, the island offers a timeless, wild beauty you will never tire of exploring. La Plage Casadelmar stands against this unparalleled backdrop on the stunning Benedettu Peninsula in the Bay of Porto-Vecchio, set in one-hectare south-facing grounds covered in fragrant maquis scrub.














La Purificadora Hotel by Ricardo Legorreta, Puebla

terrace pool

terrace pool night


Located in the historic centre of Puebla, a colonial city (world heritage UNESCO) on the road between Mexico City and Oaxaca, next door to San Francisco´s church, La Purificadora is the new incarnation of a late 19th-century factory long used to purify water for the production of ice, renovated by the renowned Mexican architect Ricardo Legorreta.

The terrace is the perfect spot to appreciate a sunset with the Church of San Francisco in the background and a view of the sorrounding gardens. The ideal place to have a drink or simply relax by the pool, sauna or jacuzzi.




lobby

library

library

restaurant

La Purificadora Restaurant offers contemporary honest Mexican cuisine. The shared tables were designed by architect Ricardo Legorreta and were produced with old wood that was founded in the former ice factory. 
restaurant

room bathroom
  source: lapurificadora.com

AMMO Restaurant by Joyce Wang, Hong Kong

Built by the British army in the mid-19th century, the former explosives magazine compound is a culturally and historically significant site.
Copper appears as a predominant material in the restaurant space – a material commonly found in machine rooms and industrial settings.
Through these juxtapositions, the diner is at once confronted with a design that is retro yet futuristic; mechanical yet luxurious.
The bunker-like ceiling is supported by copper ribs and lit warmly to further reference the explosives magazine history.
Diners will find themselves in a space that begs them to question the significance of its context. Under careful study of materials and detailing, the diners will be rewarded with clues as to ascertain the siteʼs history.
Luxurious materials such as leather, velvet and silk were chosen to offset the hard-edged custom fixtures and detailing found in the design.
With such a significant site comes inspiration drawn from a significant film noir masterpiece- Alphaville.
The AMMO restaurant not only references its prestigious context but pays tribute to it aesthetically and conceptually.
Within the restaurant, theyʼve utilised three staircases to draw the viewers attention to the 6 meters high ceiling as well as to create a dramatic and dynamic effect within the space.









photo © WANG, AMMO
sources: www.yatzer.com