Innuendo Restaurant Ceiling Installation by bluarch
bluarch have sent us images of a ceiling installation they have designed for the Innuendo restaurant in Port Washington, New York.
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Description from bluarch:
This project is conceptually linked to the notions of self-similarity and non-differentiability descending from the fractal definition of a geometry versus its topological essence. The ceiling installation is a three-dimensional, cloud-like, organic formation of 1/2”-square by 6-inch poplar members organized to shelter the occupants in a soft, shifting, ever-fluid space.
Similarly to fractal geometries, the ceiling installation in its layered layout is self-similar and recursive in the sense that its formal behavior is the same from near and from afar, and further exists within the fractal non-differentiability if one considers the essential multiplication of each member as its distance from the viewer increases. As such distance increases, the visual understanding of the form multiplies with the same detail, thus being non-differentiable.
Integrated and seamless is the lighting system of LED sources arranged to enhance the hovering nature of the poplar-cloud ceiling, and to multiply a weightless, mobile sense of space. The seating is anchored to one side of the room via a tufted banquette which pays homage to Mies’ Barcelona chair with its square organization of the buttons. The walls are all clad in cherry veneer, and a mirror band unifies the perception of the space as it runs throughout its perimeter. The storefront is frameless and further multiplies the ceiling installation, while opening the venue to the City.
Visit the bluarch website – here.
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Michelle on 07 Mar 2012 at 4:53 pm #
Absolutely stunning. I especially love how the installation plays with the lighting.
Maarit on 08 Mar 2012 at 1:03 am #
I’d appreciate this ceiling installation more if this was mainly a bar or a night club but as it also seems to be a restaurant, it makes me wonder what the food will look like in these colored lights.
David on 08 Mar 2012 at 7:19 am #
Very LeWitty.
Scott Sowers on 08 Mar 2012 at 9:34 am #
Much fenestration, no? The archispeak description nearly defies translation. The poplar cloud vendor must be very happy. Tis a striking design.