YINJISPACE use media professional’s unique perspective,try to explore the essence of life behind the design works.

© logo 粤ICP备19077098号

YINJISPACE use media professional’s unique perspective,try to explore the essence of life behind the design works.

© logo 粤ICP备19077098号
Lorenzo Botero

Ideal Restaurant

Colombian architects Lorenzo Botero and Martin Mendoza have collaborated on this warm and textural restaurant in Bogota. With Lorenzo on architecture and Martin on the interiors, the space flows into a harmonious concept grounded in a shared focus on materiality. Located in an eclectic three-storey house, featuring a highly compartmentalised mishmash of renovations,the pre-existing space posed a Tetris-level conundrum for Lorenzo as he worked to create a cohesive interior.

Inspired by the desert geography of the southern United States and from Baja California to the north of Mexico, Lorenzo looked to create a framework that could translate things architecturally.“Grounded in the local culture through the use of brick and stucco, two very everyday materials with diverse textures, we explored these in depth and that also allowed us to handle a limited but expressive colour palette,”Lorenzo goes on.

Meticulous brickwork was commissioned with specific measurements from an artisan producer and placed vertically“stacked and without joints”to lengthen the walls and provide them with movement. This brick, which they find in walls, floors, windowsills, and a fantastic curved fireplace on the second floor is highlighted by metal appliques and wall lights that bathe their natural colour and textures in a warm glow.

When Martin joined the project, a symbiosis and balance between the two architects was felt immediately.In the main dining room, a bottle rack was designed to hang in two curves from the ceiling, dividing the space into three more zones.Complementing this intimate area, Martin decided to use low furniture and a sober and measured decoration: a piece of organic wood on the fireplace, a wicker lamp, copper spotlights, and a linen canvas with an almost impressionist aesthetic. For both architects, the proposal would be incomplete without the presence of plants, so inspired by the one found in Villa de Leyva, they chose to bring olive trees to the terrace, as well as lavender, rosemary, wild grass and other unusual plants.

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