Clavel Arquitectos
Location: Murcia, Spain
Construction Company: Auto-construction
Collaborators: Aarón Hernández, Ricardo Carcelén, David Hernández, Rubén Alcaraz
Project Year: 2009
Project Area: 189,00 sqm
Photographs: David Frutos Ruiz
We were asked to redesign the Café del Arco, a project from the late 80’s, which closely linked the cultural and leisure life Murcia’s downtown. Some of the requests from the client were to enlarge the bar and connect it to the terrace and the adjacent Romea Theater Plaza, to improve the cuisine in order to extend its “tapas” and “dishes” offer, and to modernize and update its look.
In order to get a continuous space terrace-café, it was necessary to apply architectural mechanisms that are able to dissolve the boundaries between the building and public space. From the very first sketch, a winding cul-de-sac layout was the leitmotif that let us deal with all those heterogeneous conditions.
Starting from the façade, and as high as possible, we developed a continuous vertical-lines surface, that wraps the building without hardly touching it. Then it turns inside, making the access, organizing circulation space and sitting places, and working as a lattice between the different spaces. Finally it sets the trace of the bar and comes back to the façade, as if nothing had happened.
This device consists of a row of vertical iroko wood strips over a galvanized and lacquered steel framework that provides rigidity and guarantees the right alignment of the strips. The reproduction of a complete unit on a 1:1 model was essential for the definite choice of the minimal strip section that gave us the required degree of transparency and privacy.
To reinforce the idea of an interior outside, we continued the lines from the urban pavement that crosses the Romea Theater Plaza. In this way, the project appropriates the urban space, bringing the city inside the project. The new Café del Arco captures a piece of the city.
According to the refurbishment of the space, we propose a renewed 100% led lighting: RGB light that transforms the atmosphere at night, surrounding led lines that flood the walls, and the own outside made up with backlit methacrylate pieces. The “tapas” showcase gets renewed, becoming a mobile element that automatically moves up or down, allowing to use the bar during “cocktail” hours.
Architects: Thứ Sáu, 15 tháng 7, 2011
Meltino Coffee House / LOFF Atelier
Location: Braga, Portugal
Project year: 2010
Photographs: FG+SG – Fernando Guerra, Sergio Guerra
Concept
A coffee grain that draws the space… a coffee made of coffee… The underlying concept was the geometrization of the coffee grain that draws the two volumes / spaces in the plan.The grain conquers the Coffee, perforates and draws the volumes, the walls, the ceiling. Its shadow is cast in the floor, dancing in the space.
The project is divided in three areas: two volumes and an interior esplanade, which is elevated from the mall floor.
The two volumes are identical and translucent. However, they have distinct uses and furniture. The 1st Volume (lounge space) comprehends a relax area where it is served gourmet coffee.
In the 2nd volume (bar space) the public can take express coffee.
The coffee grain conquers the mall gallery and spies the public space inviting the public to enjoy the Coffee.
The grain was drawn on many scales. Then, a matrix was built in the form of 3 panels (3 meters high by 1 meter of anchor) which, inverted, created a total of 6 distinct panels.
All the walls where developed based in the study of the 6 panel matrix.
Double walls
It intends to reinforce the perforation of the grain and proportionate a body to the space. For this reason the walls and ceilings were duplicated. The central part of the ceiling is higher to give space a more dynamic feeling.The structure is in pine wood which is light and easy to build. The covering of the walls, ceilings and balconies is in MDF, painted in white. The floor covering is in linoleum.
The colors chosen were the white and the brown because of the association of these with the coffee fruit and the reflection of the light.
Furniture
The crockery and the tables were also drawn with detail, aesthetics and comfort attention. The furniture was covered with a unique and new material that is a derivative from the remnants of coffee.The furniture fulfills the space and appeals to sensorial feelings.
Rigolo Café / Terry & Terry Architecture
Architect: Terry & Terry Architecture
Location: 3465 California Street, San Francisco California, USA
Engineer: Santos Urrutia Structural Engineers Inc.
Kitchen Layout: Robert Yick Co.
General Contractor: Roebuck Construction
Project Area: 2000 sqf
Project Year: 2005
Photographs: Ethan Kaplan
The primary elements of our design include removing the low-lying drop ceiling to reveal the existing roof structure, which gives the space a lofty feel, inserting a slit skylight into the roof, allowing natural light to flood into the center of the space. Terry & Terry Architecture also designed a wood ribbon wall on the west side of the interior to connect the front and back entrances; the wall also functions as built-in seating for the dining tables.
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