Terrazzo Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/terrazzo/ The leading authority for the Architecture & Design community Thu, 02 Nov 2023 19:50:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://interiordesign.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/ID_favicon.png Terrazzo Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/terrazzo/ 32 32 Old-World Style Meets Modern Sentiments in These Flecked Surfaces https://interiordesign.net/products/flecked-surfaces-terrazzo-tile/ Thu, 27 Apr 2023 14:38:25 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_product&p=209831 The 2023 Hospitality Giants see old-world products coming back in new interpretations. See the flecked surfaces that have us falling to pieces.

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Old-World Style Meets Modern Sentiments in These Flecked Surfaces

The 2023 Hospitality Giants see old-world products coming back in new interpretations. Take a look at the flecked surfaces that have us falling to pieces.

Max Lamb’s Marmoreal large-aggregate terrazzo slabs and tiles in White by Dzek.

terrazzo slabs and tiles cover a room's walls and furniture
Photography by Delfino Sisto Legnani.

StudioCharlie’s Fossili terrazzo charger by MIPA.

a gray and white terrazzo charger
Photography by Giulio Boem.

Geotzzo Ribbon Black honed terrazzo tile by Artistic Tile.

black wavy terrazzo tiles

Terrazzo Form Waterfall tile in Vicenza by Ann Sacks.

a terrazzo tile of white and darker flecks

Le Pavé surfacing made of crushed plastic waste (shown in custom colorway at Sonia Rykiel, Paris) by SAS Minimum.

rainbow speckled surfacing made of crushed plastic waste

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George Yabu and Glenn Pushelberg Earn a Best of Year Award for This Chic Parisian Store https://interiordesign.net/projects/george-yabu-and-glenn-pushelberg-earn-a-best-of-year-award-for-this-chic-parisian-store/ Tue, 25 Jan 2022 22:24:45 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=192666 2021 Best of Year winner for Large Retail. A complex of fin de siècle, art nouveau, and art deco buildings, the last completed in 1928, La Samaritaine, a once-fabled department store in the first arrondissement, has reopened 16 years after shuttering. The multifirm renovation of the entire property includes a hotel by Peter Marino Architect, a new building by SANAA, and Interior Design Hall of Fame members George Yabu and Glenn Pushelberg’s redesign of 11,350 square feet of retail space in the landmarked art nouveau structure.

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Yabu Pushelberg

George Yabu and Glenn Pushelberg Earn a Best of Year Award for This Chic Parisian Store

2021 Best of Year winner for Large Retail

A complex of fin de siècle, art nouveau, and art deco buildings, the last completed in 1928, La Samaritaine, a once-fabled department store in the first arrondissement, has reopened 16 years after shuttering. The multifirm renovation of the entire property includes a hotel by Peter Marino Architect, a new building by SANAA, and Interior Design Hall of Fame members George Yabu and Glenn Pushelberg’s redesign of 11,350 square feet of retail space in the landmarked art nouveau structure. Formerly a decidedly middle-class destination, the store now carries the best-known luxury brands, lured by a environment that celebrates the architecture while introducing a subtle contemporary sensibility. A grand light-filled atrium—dominated by a monumental staircase, topped with a magnificently restored glass roof, and surrounded by wrought-iron balconies refinished in their original blue-gray glory—is the beating heart of the emporium. Drawing inspiration from visually similar structures such as the Grand Palais, the design team instituted curved glass fixtures and custom screens of woven metal mesh that balance and connect old and new rather than exacerbating contrast between past and present. The custom terrazzo flooring is by Karen Pearse, the strikingly graphic pattern in the center of the atrium referencing one in the neoclassical Galerie Vivienne arcade—another subtle evocation of La Belle Époque.

Yabu Pushelberg
Yabu Pushelberg
Yabu Pushelberg
PROJECT TEAM
Yabu Pushelberg: George Yabu; Glenn Pushelberg

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A Toronto Dispensary by Studio Paolo Ferrari Offers Clients an Interactive Experience https://interiordesign.net/projects/a-toronto-dispensary-by-studio-paolo-ferrari-offers-clients-an-interactive-experience/ Fri, 07 Jan 2022 16:28:02 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=192047 2021 Best of Year winner for Dispensary. The apothecarylike space by Studio Paolo Ferrari is between a laboratory and a temple, one that not only subverts the marijuana cliches but also delivers an interactive and elevated boutique experience. The project is 2021 Best of Year winner for Dispensary.

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Studio Paolo Ferrari

A Toronto Dispensary by Studio Paolo Ferrari Offers Clients an Interactive Experience

2021 Best of Year winner for Dispensary

At Alchemy, the apothecarylike space is between a laboratory and a temple, one that not only subverts the marijuana cliches but also delivers an interactive and elevated boutique experience. Studio Paolo Ferrari‘s material choices throughout the 1,500 square feet explore a fundamental tension within the world of cannabis: The product is a plant that grows from the ground but uses cutting-edge technology to maximize its potential. So, natural ash, terrazzo, and unglazed terra-cotta mix with industrial anodized aluminum, solid-surfacing, and eco-resin, the latter forming an undulating feature wall. “There’s something beautiful about the highly engineered alongside the earthy,” principal Paolo Ferrari says. That feature wall is a fiery orange, and it’s coordinated with carpet in the same shade. Most columns and displays of oils, concentrates, and topicals are white or silver, but there’s the occasional one in canary yellow. “Color was used to punctuate the concept of chemical transformation,” Ferrari explains. A wabi-sabi sensibility is also at play. Overhead, the ceiling is fitted with hundreds of aluminum fins, inspired by those Oscar Niemeyer developed in 1971 for the Communist party’s Paris headquarters.

Alchemy dispensary by Studio Paolo Ferrari.
Alchemy dispensary by Studio Paolo Ferrari.
Alchemy dispensary by Studio Paolo Ferrari features vibrant orange hues.
Alchemy dispensary by Studio Paolo Ferrari.
Overhead, the ceiling is fitted with hundreds of aluminum fins, inspired by those Oscar Niemeyer developed in 1971 for the Communist party’s Paris headquarters.
Alchemy dispensary by Studio Paolo Ferrari.
PROJECT TEAM:
Studio Paolo Ferrari: Paolo Ferrari; Joanna Wenderska; Shelley Tang

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CallisonRTKL Creates an Energetic Food Hall at HomePark Chengdu in China https://interiordesign.net/projects/callisonrtkl-creates-an-energetic-food-hall-at-homepark-chengdu-in-china/ Tue, 12 Oct 2021 19:31:14 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=189074 One of the most well-known of Chinese paintings, Along the River During the Qingming Festival, by Song dynasty painter Zhang Zeduan, inspired CallisonRTKL associate principal Yuwen Peng for HomePark Chengdu, a food hall in Chengdu, China. Nodding to the energy of the painting, Peng’s approach to the food hall was to infuse the space with a festive spirit. “The challenge was creating an indoor space that looks like a street village and replicates the hustle and bustle of an everyday market scene without being overly chaotic,” Peng explains.

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The design aims to help chefs and brands promote themselves.
The design aims to help chefs and brands promote themselves.

CallisonRTKL Creates an Energetic Food Hall at HomePark Chengdu in China

One of the most well-known of Chinese paintings, Along the River During the Qingming Festival, by Song dynasty painter Zhang Zeduan, inspired CallisonRTKL associate principal Yuwen Peng for HomePark Chengdu, a food hall in Chengdu, China. Nodding to the energy of the painting, Peng’s approach to the food hall was to infuse the space with a festive spirit. “The challenge was creating an indoor space that looks like a street village and replicates the hustle and bustle of an everyday market scene without being overly chaotic,” Peng explains.

Working with the CallisonRTKL team and collaborating closely with the client, Peng inserted a series of pavilions that might evoke the experience of walking through a village, including structures such as vendor food stands and residential huts. Hand-dyed banners and wooden accents also recall the vitality of street life.

The material palette is earthy including concrete countertops, terrazzo floors, and birch-and-stone pavilions. The COVID-19 pandemic required the team to account for new regulations, including social distancing measures and cleaning protocols. Despite that challenge, the food hall stays lively with plentiful spots for guests to shop and eat together. There are also cooking classrooms and a wine club. Throughout the spaces, CallisonRTKL aimed to create something much different than a traditional food hall and supermarket. “It’s a moodier environment to slow down the pace of our guests,” Peng notes.

Lanterns hang above the salad bar while floors are terrazzo.
Lanterns hang above the salad bar while floors are terrazzo.
The sushi bar is wood and steel.
The sushi bar is wood and steel.
Mounted baskets add personality to a pick-up area.
Mounted baskets add personality to a pick-up area.
Aisle signage is walnut and leather.
Aisle signage is walnut and leather.
The design aims to help chefs and brands promote themselves.
The design aims to help chefs and brands promote themselves.
Seating areas were inspired by community courtyards.
Seating areas were inspired by community courtyards.

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Men Bureau Draws on Global Sensibilities for a Kiev Home https://interiordesign.net/projects/men-bureau-draws-on-global-sensibilities-for-a-kiev-home/ Fri, 03 Sep 2021 02:09:38 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=187571 A couple tired of apartment living in Kiev, longed for a house of their own. When they found one—1,400 square feet, fully detached, and full of natural light—they approached Men Bureau founder Oleksandr Maruzhenko with a particularly global directive. They wished, he says, for interiors “fusing an international design sense with Japan’s unique aesthetic.”

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The glazed bedroom offers natural light, along with a Tip Top light by Pandul for after dark.
The glazed bedroom offers natural light, along with a Tip Top light by Pandul for after dark.

Men Bureau Draws on Global Sensibilities for a Kiev Home

A couple tired of apartment living in Kiev, longed for a house of their own. When they found one—1,400 square feet, fully detached, and full of natural light—they approached Men Bureau founder Oleksandr Maruzhenko with a particularly global directive. They wished, he says, for interiors “fusing an international design sense with Japan’s unique aesthetic.”

The result is a cozy abode that features neutral tones and organic shapes. An entry hallway empties into an open-plan zone enclosed by ample glazing. To the left, a kitchen in Boticcino marble and steel is lined in cherry wood storage, which expands into open shelving for ceramics and mementos in the dining area. To the right, automated shades conceal a wood and glass box of a bedroom adjacent to a library outfitted with custom shelves made from marble planes slotted into wood poles. Nearby, large windows surround the home office tucked behind a pocket door.

Roll & Hill’s pendant and a table by Kettal define the home office.
Roll & Hill’s pendant and a table by Kettal define the home office.
Maruzhenko and his team rounded the edges of hallways and walls to soften the lines of the house.
Maruzhenko and his team rounded the edges of hallways and walls to soften the lines of the house.

The bathroom’s gray terrazzo cladding is a touch deeper than the otherwise pale palette, but its bespoke marble tub and sink float luxuriously beneath curved fixtures and mirrors. “We used a big number of circles and arcs to evoke a sense of smoothness,” says Maruzhenko, “and added rounded corners to various areas of the internal space for visual comfort.” The ease is palpable.

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10 Questions With… Weiss–heiten https://interiordesign.net/designwire/10-questions-with-weiss-heiten/ Thu, 05 Aug 2021 16:33:51 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/designwire/10-questions-with-weiss-heiten/ “We became interior designers the moment we did Aesop’s first store in Germany,” says Tobias Kohlhaas, referring to the global skincare brand. “It’s actually graphic design that we studied,” adds Birgit Kohlhaas. Not that this would stop the two founders of Berlin-based design studio Weiss–heiten—partners in life and work.

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“We became interior designers the moment we did Aesop’s first store in Germany,” says Tobias Kohlhaas, referring to the global skincare brand. “It’s actually graphic design that we studied,” adds Birgit Kohlhaas. Not that this would stop the two founders of Berlin-based design studio Weiss–heiten—partners in life and work. Since completing Aesop’s moss-green tiled flagship store in Berlin in 2013, they’ve gone on to create bold and distinctive interiors for clients including European optician chain Ace & Tate and German porcelain manufacturer Meissen, also drawing from a resume rich on branding and visual communication.

Most recently, the duo completed The Office Group – Kontorhaus, Berlin, the inaugural co-working space in Germany for flexible workspace company The Office Group. Interior Design sat down with the husband-and-wife team to learn more about combining two buildings, two eras, and two different floor heights; how to encourage customer interaction with fragile porcelain; and why embracing the Bauhaus ideology opens career doors.

Interior Design: What was the overall design goal for Kontorhaus, your co-working space for The Office Group in Berlin?

Tobias Kohlhaas: Kontorhaus is the first entry into the German market for The Office Group, which began offering its flexible workspace in the U.K. We were inspired by the opulent and vibrant history of Friedrichstraße, the Berlin street the building is on, as well as the gloominess of the city on winter days. Our aim was to inject warmth and light into the space in order to create an inspirational and unique working environment, one you’d look forward to being at on a Monday.

The interior consists of two distinct previously joined buildings, one from the 19th century and one from the 1990s. The older building has five levels, and the new—an addition by architect Paul Kleihues—six. As with Berlin and its many dualities, our design aimed to merge diverse elements, to create a balance and dialogue between opposites. In this interior, old meets new, elegance meets industry, urbanity meets nature, and luxury meets mindfulness.

Birgit Kohlhaas: Reception is usually on the first or second floor, but in this case, we placed it on the fourth floor where the floors of the old and new buildings are nearly the same height. You probably don’t immediately realize it, but the reception desk, simple in shape, has the same terrazzo used for flooring in the building’s entrance hall. It’s a remake of the original.

The Aesop flagship in Berlin with interior design by Weiss–heiten. Photography courtesy of Aesop.

ID: How you think Kontorhaus stands out from other co-working spaces?

TK: With a bespoke and site-specific interior concept that reads the true nature of the building and people-centric design-thinking. We strongly believe in the energy and spirit every space owns. By examining the history of the building and its neighborhood, reading the walls with all senses, we have a lot to build upon.

ID: What else have you completed recently?

TK: A flagship store for German porcelain manufacturer Meissen in Dresden, Germany. We first suggested they open up a fancy restaurant, one where you’d invite one of the best chefs in the world every few weeks or so, and use Meissen porcelain for a beautiful dinner. Guests would eat and then experience the product—instead of looking at it and not daring to touch it. This could be a future project. What we ended up doing is creating a space that looks a bit like a living room, something with accessories and visual clues that make people feel comfortable.

There’s a long table and a really thick rose-colored carpet covers 80 percent of the space. When talking to Meissen customers, one of the things we realized is the psychology of it all. You’re not going to touch a vase that costs 700,000 euros if you are standing on a granite floor! A thick carpet makes you feel comfortable because you think, well, if I drop it, it might not break.

The Bristol, England branch of optician Ace & Tate with interior design by Weiss–heiten. Photography © Erik Undéhn.

ID: What’s upcoming for you?

TK: A premium coffee shop in Düsseldorf that will bring the whole coffee culture to the next level. The concept is a bit like what founder Dennis Paphitis used for Aesop skincare, but for coffee. These days, the product isn’t the star anymore, it’s more the community and conscious lifestyle. We’ll combine the spirit of wellbeing and a community-driven environment with a premium product.

In Shanghai, we’re creating the flagship store for a bathroom manufacturer known for its smart washlet toilet. We’re aiming for a very lifestyle-driven, cool environment, one that is less product and more experience.

The Bristol, England branch of optician Ace & Tate with interior design by Weiss–heiten. Photography © Erik Undéhn.

ID: How do you think your future interior projects will respond to Covid-19?

BK: Covid is an accelerator, but offices have already been shifting from ‘getting-the-work-done-spaces’ to much more social and creative hubs for meeting colleagues, sharing ideas, and creating a sense of cohesion or togetherness. Some might think working from home makes offices redundant, but the opposite is the case.

TK: Retail will be more important than ever before, with a combination of bricks and clicks, excellent service, inspiring spirit, and, most importantly, a mindset that provides a way to create true community with customers. Retail spaces will not be stuffed with products anymore, they will allow you to experience the brand and its values, to be inspired. Then you’ll shop from home.

ID: In what kind of home do you live?

TK: We live in an apartment with our two boys in an Art Deco building from 1908 right on Berlin’s Spree River. New buildings always demand at least some historical references for a sense of well-being, but the history and the architecture of this building has such strong character, you don’t have to do much to feel at home. We kept the interior quite minimal with art and pieces from our travels and Midcentury Modern Danish furniture and lamps.

BK: We have these Egon Eiermann chairs with the original Bauhaus stamp beneath the seat. We’re taking care of them, but they’re here for use. Furniture in your home shouldn’t be part of an exhibition—you have to live with it.

A flagship store for German porcelain manufacturer Meissen in Dresden, Germany with interior design by Weiss–heiten. Photography courtesy of Meissen.

ID: Where do you draw inspiration?

BK: We need traveling: Cultural and professional exchange always pushes us forward. Last year, we visited a couple of creative studios in Kuala Lumpur, such as Studio Bikin. There’s no better way for us to recharge and get inspired. And we love music: broadcaster, DJ, and record label owner Gilles Peterson has always has been a big influence.

ID: How do you think your childhood or formative years influenced your design thinking?

TK: My dad, Friedrich Wilhelm Kohlhaas, was an architect and that obviously had some influence. He was mostly doing private medical practices and hospitals and always took me to the construction sites, so I grew up in this environment and it made me feel comfortable. He didn’t work with computers and everything was drawn by hand, something that also had quite an impact on me.

BK: I grew up in an ordinary, medium-sized town in southern Germany and was very curious about the world and really wanted more. My main motivation at school was…the holidays. These were often adventure trips with my family. At age 16, I made my first solo trip as an au pair to the South of France. At age 18, I moved to London. I was addicted to the far away and foreign, and until now it has remained the passion and engine in my work.

A flagship store for German porcelain manufacturer Meissen in Dresden, Germany with interior design by Weiss–heiten. Photography courtesy of Meissen.

ID: Who in the industry do you particularly admire?

TK: Can we say a movement? Bauhaus, and it’s not because we are Germans and this is the only thing we can rely on. Members of the Bauhaus school understood their work as part of society, as something that can encourage people to live a better lifestyle. They understood themselves as form-givers rather than specialists. You can do anything and it doesn’t have to stick to a certain media—so from a chair to typography, from wallpaper to planning a city.

BK: I like strong women, and one of those is Faye Toogood who I admire for her freedom to design experimentally. We recently used her Roly Poly chair and sofa for a project in Berlin, and these pieces look great yet are really distinctive.

ID: What are you reading?

TK: My dad used to collect all these old German architectural magazines, so we have a huge collection going back to 1970. During the first lockdown in Germany, we were cleaning up as everyone did, and we put these all in order—and then we actually had time to read them.

The Office Group – Kontorhaus, Berlin, a co-working space with interior design by Weiss–heiten. Photography by Toby Mitchell.
The Office Group – Kontorhaus, Berlin, a co-working space with interior design by Weiss–heiten. Photography by Toby Mitchell.
The Office Group – Kontorhaus, Berlin, a co-working space with interior design by Weiss–heiten. Photography by Toby Mitchell.

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