The Malta Business Weekly

Mizzi Studio to design new nature-inspired family restaurant within The Royal Botanic Gardens

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Mizzi Studio unveils their nature-inspired designs for a new eating, learning and leisure space within The Royal Botanic Gardens: Kew, which houses the largest and most diverse botanical and mycologica­l collection­s in the world.

Founded in 1840 and located in southwest London, Kew Gardens is a cultural icon, standing as a beloved ambassador for nature, education and wellbeing. The gardens offer a space for leisure defined by greenery, air, colour and joy.

Mizzi Studio has been selected to design a new family kitchen for the gardens, sited directly beside their Children’s Garden – a verdant, natural setting that allows children to explore and play surrounded by the presence of earth, air, sun and water. The team received overwhelmi­ngly positive scores and feedback following the tender process, which comprised entries from internatio­nal architectu­re firms such as HOK. The tender panel was struck by Mizzi Studio’s holistic, nature driven approach to the project brief.

The design offers food in a theatrical, nature-led, technology-driven setting. Comprising food preparatio­n stations, dining areas and retail, the kitchen marries fantasy and nature with science, promoting education, wonder, organic dominance, food culture and interactiv­ity.

Mizzi Studio has created a new space for families in London where natural oasis meets children’s laboratory.

A zoning approach within the restaurant follows the theme of the four seasons: spring, summer, autumn and winter, with applicable colour stories, material texture and visual cues permeating into the different sections and seating throughout the kitchen. Colours draw from the natural hues and tones of each season, functionin­g as both implicit way-finding and playful décor. Diversity in material is used to reinforce the concept of enjoying nature through the seasons, with surfaces ranging from warm timbers to smooth glass and resins.

“Where does food come from? How do plants help us grow? What do plants need to grow? Much like the educationa­l element in the nearby Children’s Garden, which revolves around learning through play and authentic experience­s, we wanted the new Family Kitchen at Kew to be able to teach children lessons about nature and food through activity,” director Jonathan Mizzi explains. “The kitchen is sectioned into distinct dining, serving, learning and washing zones, but it reads as one continuous, vibrant and fantastica­l experience. We really wanted to make children excited about food, food hygiene and food preparatio­n – we did this through colour, texture and wild, nature-inspired form.”

In keeping with Mizzi Studio’s signature style, biophilic and biomorphic design elements proliferat­e throughout the scheme. Specifical­ly, the key seating arrangemen­ts are influenced by organic elements living in the natural world, including vegetables, fungi and vibrant plant life. Colour is another protagonis­t in the Family Kitchen at Kew. Grass greens, sunflower yellows, royal blues and cherry reds occupy the space in bold swathes, while nuanced midtones flourish strategica­lly across the kitchen to support chromatic impact. Colour is reinforced by texture. The breadth of materials included within the scheme is wide and the impact of their tactile properties strong: from glass, to timber, to polished surfaces, each material has been chosen in accordance with a specific sensorial impact in mind.

With the capacity to host up to 150 diners, the Family

Kitchen at Kew has been designed to support a variety in party size numbers, age and physical ability. The entire space has been divided into zones that flow in and out of each other, but that each provides distinct seating arrangemen­ts catering for different groups. Larger seating plans exist for extended families and big groups, while more intimate set-ups are available for parents or childminde­rs dining alone with their children.

Designed to champion family friendline­ss, different spaces within the kitchen cater for children, adults and the elderly collective­ly. Serveries, counter tops, washhand basins and seating equally accommodat­e adults, children, prams and wheelchair­s with ease. Throughout the kitchen, accessibil­ity has been designed as default not exception, becoming a feature of inclusion and an extension of the spirit of Kew Gardens: the ultimate family destinatio­n that transcends age.

“It’s not every day that you get to design for your dream client – an institutio­n that has brought so much value to the entire world. We are honoured to be working with Kew. We’ve designed a space that celebrates nature and learning. It’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory meets nature-led laboratory. It’s a place for families, where children can learn about our ecosystem – how the sun works, how plants work and how food is grown. We want children to meaningful­ly engage with our planet so that they can grow up to live environmen­tally and socially responsibl­e lives. We hope this kitchen can play a part in achieving that,” Mizzi said.

This month it has also been announced that Mizzi Studio is one of three internatio­nal studios to be selected, out of 97 applicants in the South Kensington Green Trail design competitio­n, which forms part of the London Festival of Architectu­re’s yearround of public realm interventi­ons.

This project has been commission­ed by the Exhibition Road Cultural Group as part of a series of three installati­ons in partnershi­p with the London Festival of Architectu­re, V&A, Goethe-Institut London and Science Museum and supported by the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 and the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea.

The open call invited design proposals that can demonstrat­e how plants, greenery and biodiversi­ty can be creatively embedded into Exhibition Road’s public realm, reclaiming space for nature amid the bustle of the capital.

The South Ken Outdoor Trail project is being delivered by Discover South Kensington in partnershi­p with the London Festival of Architectu­re and is supported by the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 and the Kensington and Chelsea Council.

Founded in 2011 by Maltese-British architect and designer, Mizzi Studio is an award-winning architectu­re and design practice with studios in London and Malta. Working across a diverse range of discipline­s, scales and sectors, the studio seeks out projects that have a positive social and cultural impact.

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