Tin Tin Experimental design for a dining space in Asia

Tin Tin Experimental design for a dining space in Asia,

A couple envisioned a modern and ethnic dining space, as a restaurant and bar,

as part of Le Corbusier’s majestically designed skyline.

The design was embodied by a team from Delhi-based architecture firm Renesa Architecture Design Interiors.

This experimental design of the city’s newest pan-Asian dining space plays with every aspect of the ultra-modern image of futuristic space designs.

Spirit has focused on creating a ‘zen’ atmosphere where local sensibilities meet typical Indian materialism in an elegant and beautiful way,

adding a sense of mystery and curiosity.

 

Tin Tin Experimental design for a dining space in Asia

 

Design Features

A singing choir hangs beautifully in the space with a combination of a surround ceiling,

stone grille and some sweeping arches that blend together easily.

Dark shades of brown, snowy white and jade intertwine in the space

to create pockets of hues and tints across the nude fabric.

The walls, floors and many surface finishes are covered with sheets of a geometric mosaic matrix,

which gives the space a mysterious look and feel.

It’s like living on graph paper and walking on the grid that is permanently inside

the space inside a cauldron of Indian stone and terrazzo.

Which took 6 months and 60 skilled stoners to cut,

polish and install the 2×2 tile units on site?

The spatial ideology of interior space between the electric power of communal dining

and the inherent privacy of hidden nooks and crannies smoothly navigates

with a maze-like space distribution in a serpentine floor plan.

 

Tin Tin Experimental design for a dining space in Asia

 

Tin Tin Experimental design for a dining space in Asia

Where the arrangement appears to be stitched into the space rather than just laid out,

the setting is complemented by leather, upholstered banquettes and chairs.

Changing skylines create a range of different experiences,

allowing the place to enjoy a different atmosphere while changing the silhouettes of the day.

At Tin Tin, materiality and craftsmanship take the highest place,

which is also the unique selling point of the place,

thus the stone mix language speaks loudly here as an essential design element.

A sense of nostalgia is also created by the combination of stone and terrazzo on the floors and surfaces,

which also adds to the inherent durability they bring.

 

Tin Tin Experimental design for a dining space in Asia

 

The design was created to re-imagine the choice of materials with new light,

envisioning it gracefully spreading over floors, walls and furniture, creating a harmonious interior space.

Modular canopy lights are used in the outdoor lounge for this purpose, to complement the semi-outdoor seating arrangement.

While the serpentine interior lighting fixtures are specially designed,

to match the curved common tables below, replicating the flow of the design scheme.

 

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