Bursts of colour punctuate interiors at Lackawanna Café in Jersey City

Bursts of colour punctuate interiors at Lackawanna Café in Jersey City

Bursts of color punctuate the interiors at Lackawanna Café in Jersey City

Called Lackawanna Café, the project occupies the ground floor and mezzanine of a mid-rise apartment building in Jersey City designed by Fogarty Finger Architecture.

Inaba Williams Architecture and Kyle May cafe in New Jersey
Inaba Williams Architecture and Kyle May have designed a cafe in Jersey City

Inaba Williams led the interior design of the project, creating the floor plan and cladding the large structural columns in glass-fiber reinforced concrete (GFRC), while Kyle May fabricated the colorful millwork elements spread throughout the space.

Many details of the envelope were left in their “raw” conditions to create a strong contrast with new elements including glossy cladding on the 22-foot-tall structural columns and the colourful millwork.

Blue shelves in white clad cafe
Colorful millwork punctuates the space

Inaba and May took advantage of the expansive windows, using light as a guide for the placement, coloration, and material of the colorful millwork installed by May.

“The salient feature of the envelope is the double-height storefront window wall, which lets in generous amounts of indirect daylight,” said Inaba Williams principal Jeffrey Inaba.

“This accentuates the finishes of the details – the GFRC columns’ semigloss undulating surface, the countertop and table’s matte seamless surfaces, the pastry case’s translucent gradient exterior, and the shelves’ translucent texture.”

Inaba Williams Architecture and Kyle May Lackawanna Cafe
GRFC clads the structural columns

For the display case, the team chose an expressive red resin with white, grey, and wood tones in the space. Additionally, complements the blue of the built-in display case, which is illuminated from above.

The lighting in the case and the “prismatic” undersides of the shelving “reveal the silhouettes of the objects on display”.

Inaba Williams Architecture and Kyle May Lackawanna Cafe
A bright red pastry case contrasts the blue shelving and service counter

Next to the shelving is a white refrigerated display, a nine-foot-tall curved structure made from bent wood that houses additicolorsoducts for sale at the cafe.

Furthermore, Surfaces feature more toned-down colors. Tucked under the mezzanine, the service counter is 24 feet long and was painted with a light matte blue. A large “butter-colored” table occupies the middle of the space, sitting on top of the polished concrete flooring.

Large table in dining room from above
A large communal table sits in the middle of the dining room

Furthermore, the primary goal for the cafe was to create a community hub and the mezzanine space as a gallery.

Because of the expansive light from the storefront windows, the team only needed to include three additional fixtures. Also, Inaba said reduced the lighting energy load for the cafe.

Moreover, Inaba and May have worked on other projects in the area, including an office in Brooklyn.

“Kyle and I share similar interests in art and industrial design,” said Inaba. “We both admire the know-how of making and the technical nitty-gritty of fabricating.”

“Working together, we’re able to dream up objects and figure out smart ways to produce them. Also, to have people experience them arranged together in a space,” he continued.

Colorful counter tops in New Jersey cafe
Much of the envelope was left exposed

 

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