Open Design Language in Open-Kitchen Restaurants

What you see is said to be what you get. The low-skilled cooking techniques and apparatus employed at branded fast-food restaurants, for example, are presented in full visibility to waiting customers. But this concept for designing open, transparent hospitality environments at least serves customers with honesty,  because although the freshest ingredients and cordon bleu techniques are nowhere to be seen, neither is the grease and grime formerly associated with the category of eatery.

Compare that to more upmarket establishments that keep the cacophony of a commercial kitchen hidden from view during service, and you start to wonder what else they might be hiding. By installing the same open-kitchen concept, professional kitchens that use talented chefs and high-quality ingredients are able to prove it.

Gimme Shelter Café and Workshop / Housescape Design Lab

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Gimme Shelter Café and Workshop / Housescape Design Lab. Image © Rungkit Charoenwat

In order to create a relaxed environment for customers to wind down or to escape distractions and lose themselves in the eyes of another, restaurants and cafés traditionally opt to keep the raucous sounds, sights and smells of a stressful commercial kitchen tucked away out of sight. It can be argued, however, that our most relaxing and enjoyable meals occur when they’re eaten with, and cooked by, friends.

The open design language intentionally inserted into the warehouse-sized Gimme Shelter Café encourages discussion amongst friends and strangers who soon feel like friends. Set face-to-face with talented chefs whose expertise lies in listening as well as cooking, customers begin to feel at home. Conversations between customers and staff quickly spark a communicative atmosphere, meanwhile, that spills out across the dining table. ‘We hope that our city will have an architecture that is related to the memories of diverse people,’ explain the architects Housescape Design Lab, ‘create overlapping social dimensions and leave some traces of memory in the quality of small, person-to-person conversations.’

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Gimme Shelter Café and Workshop / Housescape Design Lab. Image © Rungkit Charoenwat

Ugli Restaurant / loft buro

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Ugli Restaurant / loft buro. Image © Andrey Adveenko

At the part-restaurant, part-cultural museum space of Ukraine’s Ugli Restaurant in Kyiv, customers are not only encouraged to see the traditional cooking processes of the diverse regions of the Caucasus, Turkey, Lebanon and Turkmenistan, but the ‘open-kitchen, barbecue, tandoor and market food showcase inspired by Asian bazaars,’ introduce the project architects loft buro, feature ‘an intriguing way of cooking that allows guests to watch or even participate in the process.’

This combination of cultures and traditions at the restaurant is ‘vividly reflected in the design of the restaurant’s menu and in its interior decoration,’ explains loft buro, where traditional green and azure accents converse with the shape of traditional pilaf cauldrons, symbolic patterns of the Asian regions reflected in polished metal elements and ‘terracotta surfaces that resemble the textures of cult buildings.’

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Ugli Restaurant / loft buro. Image © Andrey Adveenko

The Bakery by Joost Arijs / Glenn Sestig Architects

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The Bakery by Joost Arijs / Glenn Sestig Architects. Image © Jean-Pierre Gabriel

When master Belgian chocolatier Joost Arijs opened a bakery and viennoiserie to serve Ghent’s most discerning sweet-toothed clientele, he chose the laminated luxury of the pastry treats as his star attraction. In partnership with Glenn Sestig Architects, The Bakery features ‘functionalist and minimalist design,’ explain the architects, handing ‘a leading role to the product in a visible baker’s studio.’

The bakery, in fact, uses the same honest design feature employed by fast-food restaurants, presenting racks of freshly prepared loaves to serve as a backdrop behind the service counter, where an array of viennoiserie treasures are laid out in walnut trays in front. The contrasting combination of the surface materials of natural stone and brushed stainless steel, along with the warmth of the walnut trays and shelving creates a ‘fascinating contrast between architecture and craftsmanship,’ describe the architects, with austere materials on one hand, and the warm, golden hue of freshly-baked bread on the other.

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The Bakery by Joost Arijs / Glenn Sestig Architects. Image © Jean-Pierre Gabriel

Caracas Bakery / Acta Studio

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Caracas Bakery / Acta Studio. Image © James Jackman

The sense of smell is one of the most emotionally rewarding senses of the human body. And the scent of freshly baked bread makes bakeries some of the most enjoyable places to spend time in. At the Caracas Bakery in Miami, architects Acta Studio chose to position the bakery’s two main ovens and kitchen worktops in the center of the space, ringed by a half-height wall that allows the sight and scent of fresh-baked bread to drag customers inside.

Once in, a bar-height counter is in a perfect position to stand at. Insight and in noseshot of the open kitchen. ‘Inspired by minimalist Scandinavian design,’ explains Acta Studio, the bakery uses a mixture of neutral earth tones and natural materials – with handmade wooden display spaces and wood paneling – bringing together the two handcrafted arts of carpentry and baking.

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Caracas Bakery / Acta Studio. Image © James Jackman

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Cite: James Wormald. "Open Design Language in Open-Kitchen Restaurants" 24 Oct 2023. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1007695/open-design-language-in-open-kitchen-restaurants> ISSN 0719-8884

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