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Architects: Bernardes Arquitetura
- Area: 150 m²
- Year: 2014
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Photographs:Leonardo Finotti
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Manufacturers: Corian
Text description provided by the architects. This is the project for the restaurant Gurumê, which specializes on Japanese cuisine. The name is a witty play of the word ‘gourmet’ and aims to emit a feeling of simplicity and sophistication, concept which the office sought to carry through to the design.
The joining of two continuous rooms produced three space with distinct atmospheres: the main hall, the private spaces and the traditional sushi bar. The largest of these contains a collective table with a winding shape that stimulates people’s interaction.
The ‘private’ space are formed by a tunnel structured by a succession of geometrically defined porticoes cladded with thin slabs of cumaru timber. Towards the back one finds the sushi bar, comprising of corian table tops where the client is invited to watch the dishes being prepared.
The materiality of the project, a combination of oxidised copper and timber, was a choice seeking to evoke feelings reminiscent to fishing world: its culture, its boats and its ships.
Meanwhile, the hydraulic tiles found on the floors are all hand-crafted and neutral to guarantee the focus rests on the colours of the wood and oxidised copper.