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
AvroKO

Oiji Mi Restaurant

New York-based design studio AvroKO has created the interior of Oiji Mi, a local restaurant, by taking Korean culture into account and redesigning everything from the house to the interior.

AvroKo, a studio that focuses on hospitality, completed Oiji Mi, an upscale Korean dining spot in the Flatiron District – an area once home to over 100 social clubs during the Gilded Age.

"Oiji Mi's design recalls these classic Manhattan social clubs through bold marbles, rich leather and velvet fabrics and dark walnut woods, but reimagines them to represent the fusion of Korean and American culture," said the design studio.

AvroKO based the main dining room on a hanok, a traditional Korean home dating back to the 14th century. Interlocking timber beams across the ceiling and walls mimic those used to construct the hanok, while gridded partitions echo the windows and screens found inside. A wooden flooring system known as daecheong runs through the restaurant, from the bar area at the front to the open dining space behind.

Lighting is also based on the shapes and textures of Korean jewellery, and decorative hairpins called binyeo. Among these bespoke designs are pendants suspended straight above the tables, bead-like sconces and chandeliers that arc out from a central column. "The designers also brought in elements of dansaekhwa, or the repetition of action which is known to stabilise and restore those in its presence," AvroKO said.

This principle is apparent in the use of textiles, such as a custom installation above the bar influenced by jogakbo, a style that uses patchwork to create flowing patterns and shapes. Tabletops of walnut and marble accompany a palette of teal and claret across the walls and upholstery. Mirrored and tinted metal panels under the tall ceilings make the space feel larger, and also harken back to the Gilded Age clubs.

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