Zen Sushi Restaurant
Back to Projects list- Location
- Via degli Scipioni, 243, Rome, Italy
- Year
- 2014 Client
Zen Sushi srl, Via degli Scipioni, 243 Roma
Project
Carlo Berarducci Architecture; Carlo Berarducci
Collaboratores
Rossella Lanari, Inessa Garder
Photography
FG+SG Fernando Guerra
Building surface gross
350 sqm
Building surface net
250 sqm
Program
Kaiten Sushi restaurant for 90 seated
Status
completed october 2014
General contractor
Edilgero srl, Roma, Italy Furniture: TRE&R S.r.l., Roma
Celings
Barrisol – Normalu S.a.s, France
Marble
Alfa Marmi S.r.l, Napoli, Italy
Glasses
Vetreria Bazzanese S.r.l. Bologna, Italy
Lighting
Artemide S.p.a. Italy
Seating
La Palma S.p.a. Italy
Sofas
Pialma S.r.l. Italy
The project is inspired by the walkways in the forest bordered by the succession of matt black and glossy red-orange wooden portals, which lead to the temples of Fushimi Inari in Kyoto, of which reproduces colors and suggestions.
Zen Sushi was the first Japanese restaurant to bring in Italy the Kaiten, the particular conveyor belt to serve freshly prepared sushi on colored saucers indicating prices. On the tenth anniversary of the restaurant in Rome the property wanted to give a new look. The design challenge was to create a space with a truly Japanese essence in a contemporary way.
The dynamism of the kaiten suggests to emphasize the dynamic dimension of the space. The project, conceived with the Kyoto walkways in mind, is thought as a process, a succession of steps and changes of direction that gradually reveal the spaces of the restaurant and never close the perspective. To each change of direction corresponds a subsequent opening that invites to continue exploring the space. The straight lines of the suspended ceilings and the infinite sequence of the vertical elements of the walls underline this dynamic. Red orange reflecting suspended ceilings emphasize the visual perspectives and identify the different areas of the hall, the sushi bar and a small more intimate room in the bottom, dividers and wall coverings formed by the close succession of thousand of vertical black timber elements, lacquered from one meter up of glossy red-orange, drive and mark the going through, while a rice paper backlit wall underlines the central focus of the restaurant, the Kaiten and the open workstation of the sushi master. All the space is conceived as an architectural promenade rather than a simple decor of the interior.
As the works should have to be done in the four weeks of the august holidays the attention was focused on a few elements that could strongly characterize the space while the spatial box was neutralized with blacks floors and black ceilings and air systems. Ceilings, wall coverings, and a backlit wall are all designed as separate elements between each others, like suspended inside the space in such a way that they could be manufactured and assembled independently from each other and from installations allowing to accelerate the phase of realization on site.