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  • Atelier XY covers cocktail bar in Shanghai with over 1,000 insects

    Preserved tarantulas and beetles decorate the shadowy rooms inside this bar in Shanghai, China designed by local studio Atelier XY.Atelier XY designed the bar, which is called J Boroski, to reflect its owners’ interest in insects.
    It’s located in Shanghai French Concession – a region of the city that was occupied and governed by the French state from 1849 up until 1943. Over the last few decades the area has been redeveloped, and it’s now host to a number of eateries, boutiques and quaint music venues.

    Top image: beetles cover the surfaces of the bar. Above: a glass-brick wall runs down the back of the room
    To enter the bar, visitors walk through an assuming door and up through a dark stairwell.

    “It acts as a transition between the noisy exterior and the quiet interior. Once the reception is reached, the unique character of this place slowly reveals itself,” explained the studio.

    Behind the partition are dimly lit lounge areas
    The main bar area inside is dominated by a 12-metre-long counter where up to eight mixologists can stand and rustle up cocktail orders.
    Amber-hued lights illuminate drink bottles on display, fostering a sense of warmth.

    Office AIO’s Bar Lotus in Shanghai turns from daytime cafe into evening cocktail bar

    A gridded teak-wood framework covers the wall directly behind the counter and extends up to cover half the bar’s ceiling. Every square opening in the grid is centred by a beetle – in total there are 1,254.

    Dark leather furniture features throughout the bar
    Along the rear of the bar is a glass brick wall, through the centre of which runs a series of see-through blocks that contain 42 preserved Thai Black tarantulas.
    It has also been inbuilt with a couple of black-iron drawers – when pulled out, further taxidermy insect specimens are revealed. These can also double-up as small ledges where standing visitors in the bar can rest their drinks.

    Preserved spiders are set inside the glass-brick wall
    The wall separates the bar from a couple of dim lounge areas dressed with comfy armchairs upholstered in dark, umber-coloured leather.
    A small amount of light is offered by a handful of tealight candles in glass tumblers.

    The bar includes a lab-style space where guests can watch cocktails being made
    There is also what the studio describes as a “chamber room”, which lies behind a heavy glass-brick door. Inside there’s a laboratory-style space where visitors will be invited to watch mixologists experiment with making drinks, using extravagant tools like centrifuges or rotary distillation machines.
    The dark colour palette of the bar seeps through into the bathroom, which is completely clad in glazed, oxblood-coloured tiles. It’s centred by a lengthy wooden sink.

    Oxblood-coloured tiles cover the bar’s bathroom
    Atelier XY is based in Shanghai and was established in 2018 by Qi Xiaofeng and Wang Yuyang.
    Its J. Boroski project is shortlisted in the bar interior category of this year’s Dezeen Awards. It will go up against spaces such as The Berkeley Bar & Terrace by Bryan O’Sullivan Studio, which features ornate plasterwork friezes, walnut wall panelling and a blush-pink snug where guests can retire with their drinks.
    Photography is courtesy of Schran Images and Hu Yanyun.
    Project credits:
    Design: Atelier XYTeam: Qi Xiaofeng, Wang Yuyang, Chen XiProduct design: Notion Common, Atelier XYLighting: Zenko lighting design

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  • Four Pillars Laboratory in Sydney is a “sanctuary” for gin enthusiasts

    Juniper berry-blue furniture sits against blackened walls inside this cosy bar, laboratory and store that design studio YSG has created in Sydney for gin brand Four Pillars. Four Pillars Laboratory occupies a two-storey corner building in Sydney’s buzzing Surry Hills neighbourhood. It was originally built in 1939 as premises for a tea company, but has
    The post Four Pillars Laboratory in Sydney is a “sanctuary” for gin enthusiasts appeared first on Dezeen. More

  • O shop in Chengdu is a lifestyle store by day and a bar by night

    A series of mirrored panels obscure the cocktail bar that lies inside this shop-cum-cafe in Chengdu, China created by design studio Office AIO.The shop, which is unusually called O, was named by its owner and the co-founder of Office AIO, Tim Kwan.

    Taking the first letter from the word “object”, Kwan and the shop owner felt that O was the “perfect shape representing eternity – it has no beginning nor end, no direction nor a right way round”.

    The looping shape of the letter O also nods to the shifting function of the 68-square-metre shop: by day it’s a cafe that sells and showcases a curated selection of lifestyle items and designer furnishings, while at night it turns into a bar.

    Down one side of the shop runs a lengthy sandstone counter where the cafe’s coffee machine is kept. Just in front is a long wooden table where the barista can prepare drink orders.
    The base of the counter has been in-built with a fireplace, which can be switched on as night falls to evoke a cosier mood within the store.

    On the other side of the store is a silver-metal shelf where products are displayed and a row of fold-down seats upholstered in tan leather.

    Chengdu cafe features interiors inspired by Wes Anderson’s The Grand Budapest Hotel

    The rear of the store appears to be lined with mirrored panels, but these can be drawn back to reveal the night-time drinks bar. Liquor bottles line the inner side of the panels.

    Surfaces throughout the rest of shop O have otherwise been kept simple. A patchy band of exposed concrete runs around the lower half of the walls, but off-white paint has been applied to the upper half.
    Interest is added by a handful of potted plants and a sequence of arched screens that have been suspended just beneath the ceiling.

    The last screen has been fitted with an LED strip light that can be adjusted to imbue the space with different colours.
    “[The screens] bring a sense of character to the store without occupying any footprint,” explained the studio.
    “We hope that this space will encourage quality ideas, objects, and people to interact and exchange, and ultimately reach a wholesome experience that is objectively desirable,” it concluded.

    O by Office AIO is longlisted in the small retail interior category of this year’s Dezeen Awards.
    It isn’t the first day-to-night venue that the studio has created – two years ago it completed Bar Lotus in Shanghai, which boasts emerald-coloured walls and rippling rose-gold ceilings. The project won the restaurant and bar interior category of the 2019 Dezeen Awards, when judges commended its mix of contemporary and traditional references.
    Photography is courtesy of WEN Studio.
    Project credits:
    Designed by: Tim Kwan/Office AIOConstruction: Sichuan ChuFeng Architectural Decoration

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  • Kink restaurant in Berlin is dominated by a red-neon light installation

    A tangle of red neon tubes hangs at the centre of Kink restaurant and bar in Berlin, which has been designed by owners Oliver Mansaray and Daniel Scheppan. Kink was created by Mansaray and Scheppan to blend contemporary art and gastronomy “with a touch of nonsense”. It occupies a restored industrial building in Pfefferberg, a […] More

  • Islyn Studio converts warehouse in Albuquerque into Sawmill Market food hall

    New York’s Islyn Studio has overhauled an old lumber warehouse in Albuquerque, New Mexico and turned it into a sun-lit food hall with various spots to indulge. Called Sawmill Market, the project occupies an old warehouse in the city’s Sawmill District that measures 40,000 square feet (3,716 square metres). It is billed as the first […] More

  • Interior design students at Chelsea College of Arts present conceptual restaurant and bar designs

    Students at Chelsea College of Arts in London present designs for bars and restaurants developed on their interior design course in this digital student exhibition for Virtual Design Festival. The eight students completed the projects while studying Module Two of the Interior Design short course at the school, which is part of University of the […] More

  • Interior design short course students at Chelsea College of Arts present conceptual restaurant and bar designs

    Short course students at Chelsea College of Arts in London present designs for bars and restaurants developed on their interior design course in this digital student exhibition for Virtual Design Festival. The eight students completed the projects while studying Module Two of the Interior Design short course at the school, which is part of University […] More

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    Anne Claus Interiors uses natural materials and earth tones for beach restaurant De Republiek

    Sand-coloured walls serve as a backdrop to the linen, cane and teak wood furnishings inside this beachside restaurant and bar near Amsterdam, designed by Anne Claus Interiors. De Republiek is set along a stretch of beach in Bloemendaal aan Zee, a seaside neighbourhood just an hour’s train ride from central Amsterdam. For the past 17 […] More