Archive for the ‘Bars’ Category
The people behind King & Grove recently renovated a lakeside woodland lodge dating from the early 50s. It reopened this summer as Ruschmeyer’s, a hotel that evokes feelings of a grown-up summer camp.

Understated nautical details feature throughout, but particularly in the Electric Eel where walls are lined with sails and drawings of boats. Simple wooden furniture ensures a modern yet warm atmosphere.


The 19 guestrooms that are dotted around a central garden are kept simple, with panelled walls painted white and curtains strung like sails. Chairs come in the shape of hammocks and beds are finished off with wicker-threaded headboards and fine linens from Frette. Details like unusual bronze lights and nostalgic imagery enhance the feeling of escapism that the rooms envoke.


(Images via King&Grove)
Tags: Hotel Interior, Montauk, Ruschmeyers
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Chambers Eat and Drink is a new bar in San Francisco’s Phoenix Hotel, located in the city’s infamously gritty Tenderloin district. Despite its ’50’s motel’ past it is known as a rock royalty favourite, with the likes of Pearl Jam and Keanu Reeves passing through its doors in the past.
It’s new facelift, the handy work of Oakland’s Mr. Important, seems to reflect the affinity celebrities have for it. Chambers’ walls are lined with 10,000 odd records that acknowledge its past and creates a library of sorts with a warm, interesting texture. The lush interior is comfortably furnished and my suspicion is that you’d want to obey the glamorously lit bar and be amazing.



(Images via weheart)
Tags: chambers, hotel bar, pheonix hotel
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The interior design arm of Tom Dixon, Design Research Studio, have created the interior for the new Restaurant at the Royal Academy of Arts, London. This is the latest project for renowned restaurateur Oliver Peyton of Peyton and Byrne. The 150 cover restaurant opened to the public 19th January 2011. The Design The 250 m2 refurbishment references the long and illustrious history of the Royal Academy of Arts with materials chosen to complement the existing fabric of the Regency building including marble, brass and velvet.

The dining area is divided into different zones, with each area inspired by the work of a different Royal Academy Great such as Turner and Sir John Soane. To extend the gallery experience for diners, Design Research Studio has designed a dramatic free- standing unit in the centre of the space. Consisting of a number of glass cubes, the structure will house an extraordinary selection of sculptures and busts dating back to 1897. The pieces belong to the Royal Academy of Arts permanent collection but have long been stored out of public view.

The new bar is set to be a key focal point in the restaurant made from Mount Etna lava stone and hand-made glazed brick. Designed as a robust, sculptural object, its grandeur is enhanced by a dramatic cast glass chandelier suspended above. Other interior highlights include Etch, the digitally etched brass pendant light and Scoop, the injection-moulded foam seating both designed by Tom Dixon shown for the first time in this location.

Tags: dining, glass cubes, london, royal academy of arts, sculptures, Tom Dixon
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New York designers Nema workshop have created this unusual interior for emerging brand D’espresso.
Asked to relate the design to its location in Madison Avenue, Nema workshop took inspiration from nearby Bryant Park Library but turned the room sideways to form this playful interior.
Full scale photographic prints onto custom tiles allow bookshelves to wrap from floor to ceiling, whilst gravity defying pendant lights jut out from behind the bar. A herringbone clad wall opposite to this mimics a floor in this surreal café space.
The designers’ slanted take on a straightforward concept makes for a spectacular, if not slightly disorientating interior!
Tags: cafe, new york, restaurant-interior-design
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The Bramble Cafe and Super Natural was a very inspired show space presented during the London Design Festival in the Brompton Design District in South Kensington. Placed in The Garage, both, the temporary café and its exhibits were inspired by the wild and natural life of the English countryside. On show was the new collection Assemblage 1 by Studio Toogood, and Arabeschi di Latte took care of the food and eating environment, in their usual wonderful way, also selling delicious goodies from La Fromagerie. As visitors enter the space they will encounter a mushroom installation by New Forest forager Mrs Tee, whilst experiencing a bespoke scent dedicated to woodland by Francis Kurkdjian.

An adventurous wander down country lanes with the crunch of autumn leaves underfoot. As you gather and forage for mushrooms, blackberries, conkers, plums, heritage variety apples and pears, wet walnuts, different styles of grapes, pumpkins and wild salad leaves together with a variety of English farmhouse cheese; these will become the ingredients for an ‘untamed’ meal.

Pictures by Anita Silva
Tags: Arabeshi di Latte, Bramble Cafe, London Design Festival 2010, Studiotoogood, Super Natural
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Lauren Geremia is the mastermind of Geremia Design, an emerging Californian design studio that is gaining a reputation for its eclectic and artful restaurant and bar designs. Dotted around San Francisco are a host of projects that bear her trademark style – a mixture of textures, colours, art, antique, found and recycled objects.
Geremia often employs bold graphic prints to accompany the paintings, textiles and artefacts of her sumptuous interiors. A monochrome frieze of birds in flight adorns the ceiling of the Bloodhound bar in downtown San Francisco which has been designed with a ‘hunting lodge’ thematic in mind. The bar has been popular with locals and celebrated for being ‘not a dive, not a cocktail lounge, not a club – it’s a bar… awash with wood and leather and people drinking drinks’.
Some of her other notable projects are 330 Ritch, Umami, The Barbershop and Aventine, all in San Francisco and the Bay area.






Tags: bar, Geremia Design, printed ceiling, San Francisco
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Outofstock recently completed the interior design of Hatched, a casual restaurant in Singapore that serves breakfast all-day. Located in a fifty-year old student dormitory building next to the National University of Singapore’s Law Campus, Hatched serves up a curious array of egg-inspired dishes and desserts catering to a youthful target audience.
The intent behind the design was to create a cozy and fun dining atmosphere which identifies with the restaurant’s theme of breakfast and eggs. Another challenge was to accommodate up to 38 diners and a kitchen into the 58 square-metre space. We divided the dining areas into two parts – a central dining area which features long communal dining tables reminiscent of summer camps, and a fun-wall area where customers dine in front of a large blackboard-painted wall which allows the guests and staff to doodle or leave messages. A long bar counter features a façade consisting of oak, maple and beech veneers and accompanying bar stools also feature the same three solid woods. The play with natural light is a key ingredient which characterises the space and we designed oak veneered panels with egg-shaped cut outs to filter light in from street-facing glass windows. These “egg panels” also serve as an identifiable frontage for the restaurant. The use of guava tree branch off-cuts sleeved over bulb holders adds a tinge of farmhouse charm and all the exposed light bulbs are connected to dimmers so as to regulate the brightness needed during the day and night. Although there has been much phasing-out efforts of incandescent light bulbs in recent years, the rich, warm glow and character of near obsolete carbon filament bulbs we found at a specialty bulb supplier was difficult to resist. We chose to expose the original concrete ceiling of this historical building and highlighted its textural qualities with lighting.



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On a tight budget and an even tighter deadline, Glass Hill delivered an open, modern and flexible interior within the Grade 2 listed Darwin building on Kensington Gore, London – the Royal College of Art’s ARTbar. The design and choice of materials was a balance between dynamic space filling surfaces and a desire for a subtle restoration of the modernist building fabric and detailing.
The original flooring was re-discovered, as was the full ceiling height and dramatic fine metal frame windows. The buildings familiar language of stone, render and timber was expanded into the new bar elements. The 17m long high-backed seating unit reflects light back into the space and also provides hanging for coats and bags, but can also hold the custom made wooden stools – allowing the space to be cleared almost completely for a variety of events. Just as the DJ desk which can be pulled out from the wall.




Tags: ARTbar, Glass Hill, london, RCA
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Viet Hoa, a Kingsland Road favorite, has recently been completely renovated and now boasts a serene, minimalist interior and stylish new branding, in complete contrast to its former haphazard self. Its new interior design is clean and simple and features walls and ceilings clad in timber, contemporary lighting and furniture, with quirky touches such as an entire wall covered in moss that stretches across two floors at the stairway.

Another unusual element can be found in the new bar in the basement. It has a playful sunken rectangle in the floor that becomes an informal lounge area with the addition of legless chairs and little tables.

The revised branding and identity was mainly influenced by the name of the cafe. ‘Hoa’ means ‘blossoming flower’ in Vietnamese and a logo mark has been added across all way-finding, branding collateral, packaging, and uniforms.

The new interior perfectly complements the delicious food and I’m sure with its stylish new space it will become even more popular.
(images via London Design Guide)
Tags: bar-design, interior-design-london, london, restaurant-interior-designers, Vietnamese restaurant
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Look Mum No Hands is the clever name of a new cafe/bar/bike workshop that recently opened in Old Street. Here you can enjoy some seriously delicious coffee and cake while your bike is being tended to by an expert bicycle mechanic. The interior of the former architectural showroom is pared down and airy, with a select few beautiful vintage bikes on display in the window and some large prints of past races on the walls. The minimalist look of the space is enhanced with striking details, such as the vintage lamps above the bar that have the added quirky touch of hanging from bicycle chains. They also have a lovely outdoor area that will no doubt be very busy on sunny days. The relaxed, fuss free space and staff have won me over and I will definitely not wait for bicycle problems to go there again.






Tags: bar-design, bike workshop, cafe, london
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