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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Antilope Cafe in Monterrey, Mexico by Mass Operations

 
August 17th, 2018 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Mass Operations

How would Wes Anderson design a chapel for Coffee?

Antilope Café is a new coffee Brand in Mexico. The 80m2 space is located within the Arboleda Development in Monterrey México and it represents the brand´s first physical space where the marriage of Chiapas coffee beans and Dulcinea´s kitchen (a local restaurant by the same owners) takes place. The design came through a series of challenges. On one hand we needed to provide a fresh and unique space that could assimilate the identity and values of the Antilope brand, the quality of it´s coffee and food, on the other hand we needed to avoid having the space feel gender specific. We proposed to create an open and bright space suitable for the worshiping of coffee — A chapel for coffee.

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

  • Architects: Mass Operations
  • Project: Antilope Cafe
  • Location: Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico
  • Photography: Lorena Darquea
  • Design: Mass Operations / Viviano Villarreal
  • Design Collaborators: Nelson Ontiveros
  • Constructed Area: 80m2
  • Year: 2018

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

Influenced by the hard symmetries in Wes Anderson movies, we split the space into a feminine side (pink) and a masculine side (green), which are then separated or joined by diagonals within the flooring and dropped ceiling patterns. Each side is design to enjoy coffee at a different pace, while the green side is designed in order to spend longer periods of time and enjoy the food, the pink side is designed for a faster in and out experience, with high tables that are suitable for a quick espresso (standing up, as the Italians do).

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

The references to a chapel are everywhere, from the large floating marble frame “The Altar”, where the barista “Priest” supplies you with your coffee as if it were your communion, all the way to the high tables that are formed from marble that falls from the heavens and simulate a confessional, where one can sit face to face to ones cup and confess, in company or by oneself.

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

Image Courtesy © Lorena Darquea

Image Courtesy © Mass Operations

Image Courtesy © Mass Operations

Image Courtesy © Mass Operations

Image Courtesy © Mass Operations

Image Courtesy © Mass Operations

Image Courtesy © Mass Operations

Image Courtesy © Mass Operations

Image Courtesy © Mass Operations

Image Courtesy © Mass Operations

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Categories: Cafe, Interiors




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