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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.

Noma 2.0 in Copenhagen, Denmark by Studio David Thulstrup ApS

 
October 29th, 2018 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Studio David Thulstrup ApS

Noma 2.0 is located near Christiania on a historic site next to a lake that was once part of Copenhagen’s ancient fortifications. An existing concrete building that had been used for munition storage was turned into prep kitchens, fermentation lab and staff rooms. Bjarke Ingels’s BIG designed a complex of 11 new buildings for the restaurant, test kitchen and greenhouses. Clustered like classic Norwegian farm buildings they will eventually be surrounded by trees and plants with expansive views of the lake. Studio David Thulstrup designed the interiors to be true to the structure, echoing the external materials and with an honest, simple and modern feel.

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

  • Architects: Studio David Thulstrup ApS
  • Project: Noma 2.0
  • Location: Refshalevej 96, 1432 Copenhagen K, Denmark
  • Photography: Irina Boersma 
  • Client: Noma
  • Opening Date: February 15, 2018

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

The design concept emphasises a playful approach to materials – oak, brick, steel, concrete and tombac. Each building is made of one material and has a sole purpose, for example the dining room, entrance, lounge or private dining room. They’re expressive individually but make a more powerful statement grouped together. Noma 2.0 chef and co-owner René Redzepi calls the seven buildings comprising the restaurant the “Village”. Let’s go for a tour.

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Entrance

The gabled entrance building is made of tombac, which will patinate to a matt brown. Guests arrive at a rudimentary front door that looks like it’s been cut out of the slatted wooden front.  Should guests wish to take their shoes off at the front door as many Danes do at home, the terrazzo floor is sandblasted so they can feel its river stones underfoot. Inside, natural oak panels line the ceiling and walls, which have integrated wardrobe doors. Flying at due north overhead is an artwork of driftwood and raw earth magnets, ‘Conscious Compass’, 2018, made especially for the space by the Danish Icelandic artist Olafur Eliasson, who’s a friend of René Redzepi’s.

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Service Kitchen

At Noma 2.0, René Redzepi wants the cooks to be at the centre of everything working in an open kitchen where the stainless steel usually seen in professional kitchens is banished in favour of oak-clad islands not unlike what you would have at home. Studio David Thulstrup developed the kitchen cabinets with the Belgian professional kitchen specialist Maes Inox. The energy of the kitchen spills into the surrounding rooms, connected by glass walkways. In the spacious circulation area lab-style glass jars on a round table display specimens of whatever is in season in front of an artwork by the Danish artist Carl Emil Jacobsen using pigments made from crushed stones.  A steel and glass roof floods the kitchen with natural light. On the floor is a more highly polished version of the river stone terrazzo.

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Dining Room

Think of the 42-seat dining room as a modern barn with huge glass windows looking out at the lake and the nature, where guests are otherwise enveloped in floor to ceiling oak. Dinesen heart oak planks with their signature butterfly joints are used on the floors and the walls are lined with stacked planks, held together by 250,000 invisible screws. In the centre is a counter made from a 200-year-old timber beam blackened from being immersed in the harbour nearby. Left deliberately unadorned, the dining room is designed for storytelling. As Noma’s seasonal menu changes so too will decorations hung by Noma’s staff. Working with chef Redzepi, Studio David Thulstrup designed new dining tables and chairs that are a contemporary riff on traditional Scandinavian chairs with seats and backs of woven paper cord. Made in light or darker smoked oak they were produced by the family owned Brdr. Krüger. Additional custom-made furniture includes built-in and freestanding pouring and waiter stations.

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

As with other spaces, the dining room is lit by a lighting range developed for the project by Studio David Thulstrup with the Austrian lighting firm XAL. It pairs new and flexible technology with a refined and simple design language. The conical shades were made in collaboration with designer Jonas Edvard, using locally sourced gesso.

Private Dining Room

More architectural than the main dining room, the private dining room is an intimate space with a smoked oak table seating up to 20 people as its centrepiece and large windows looking out onto a stand of trees. Dining in here should feel like a very personal experience. A wall of shelves houses Noma’s living archives and the six metre long table designed by Studio David Thulstrup was made by Brdr. Krüger from three planks of a 160-year-old oak tree from the island of Fyn. The architectural ceiling beams are clad in white oiled Dinesen Douglas pine. Cabinetmaker Malte Gormsen made the bespoke credenza designed by Studio David Thulstrup. Lampshades of locally sourced seaweed were developed in collaboration with designer Jonas Edward. Studio David Thulstrup designed wall lamps akin to those found in artist ateliers.

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Lounge

The lounge is a place of welcome as well as somewhere for guests to linger and reflect on the dining experience they’ve just had. Large oak-framed windows with built-in oak and leather benches look out on the lake and greenhouses. Custom-made cream bricks with a grey grout on the floors and walls and natural oak planks on the ceiling evoke the clean modern lines of 70s Danish style. It’s nicely homey and relatively bare to heighten a sense of honesty and simplicity. A mix of classic and new furniture is arranged loosely like a home with some grouped near an open brick fireplace. Referring to large stone slabs that stood outside the old Noma, Studio David Thulstrup designed coffee tables in Swedish granite with smooth tops and rough-hewn edges. They are a strong foil for lounge chairs in natural leather or linen by the Finnish furniture producer Nikari. Custom-designed pieces by Studio David Thulstrup include two- and three-seater sofas in oak, a rug produced by Kasthall and the pouring station bar made from oak and Swedish granite. Blue cushions from a Faroese weaver and a yellow-pigmented concrete plinth by Pettersen & Hein add dashes of colour.

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Art works include pieces from the ‘Amino Acids’ series of mould on wood by the Danish artist Silas Inoue. In homage to Noma’s residency in Australia 84 abalone shells are grouped together on the brick wall. Vintage 70s pendant lamp shades by Jørgen Wolff hang above the sofa tables and the studio created integrated spotlights for the ceiling with XAL.

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Irina Boersma

Image Courtesy © Studio David Thulstrup ApS

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Categories: Interiors, Lounge, Restaurant




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