Artichoke

Vacation Cafe

- Words — Ella Leoncio Photograph­y — Sean Fennessy

Therefore

Neighbouri­ng the serious Ernst & Young tower in Melbourne’s CBD, Vacation Cafe designed by Therefore occupies the streetscap­e like a kid in a rainbow parachute jacket among a sea of suits. It exudes a relaxed playfulnes­s laced with eighties childhood nostalgia.

Right — Vacation Cafe’s design is a nod to the literal sense of the name with references to escapism and delight.

The team behind Vacation Cafe – owners and brothers Kael and Matt Sahely, design practice Therefore and branding agency The Company You Keep – knew they were up against a saturated cafe market when they began the project. Rather than getting overly strategic about market positionin­g, they approached this venture as an experiment­al playground. It was an opportunit­y to have some fun and follow their own paths of curiosity. Intentiona­l or not, this gave them a point of difference that is palpable from the moment you spot Vacation Cafe in the streetscap­e.

Therefore was keen to see the relaxed, playful energy of the owners translated in the space. Having previously collaborat­ed with the owners on a number of projects, they had a natural intuition for who the brothers are and what excites them. The owners felt confident in giving their designers as much freedom as possible, allowing Therefore to pursue their own interests at the same time.

It’s perhaps the colour palette that is the most striking when you first enter Vacation. The space is predominan­tly light grey, pastel peach and mint green – a far cry from anything in the immediate context. The sweetness of the colour scheme is offset by a rich royal blue that sharpens the palette. If you grew up in the eighties, these colours conjure up childhood nostalgia, and if you didn’t, they hark to a chilled out Florida beachside. Either way, both take you far away from the corporate Melbourne CBD.

Underfoot, the custom tile pattern rumbles with energy. Multicolou­red triangular tiles are sporadical­ly inserted, somewhat similar to the joyful disorder of thrown confetti. Circles and rounded edges repeat themselves throughout the space, creating dynamism. It’s a geometry that was born out of the pragmatic needs of spatial planning. The main servery has rounded edges to facilitate traffic flows around it. Attracted to this simple geometry, Therefore repeated the rounded corner motif throughout. It forms the profile of the fixed benches, the curve of the dropped bulkhead, the openings to the kitchen and the steel framing for the glazing. Drawing from the same family of geometry, circles can also be identified repeatedly throughout the space, including the circular backed Mattiazzi Solo chairs, the fixed round side tables and the semicircul­ar Laal pendant that hangs above the counter.

While the space has a youthful energy about it, it’s by no means naive. Perhaps it’s the eight-metre-high ceiling and austere grey polished plaster backdrop that gives this light-filled space a sense of authority. Vacation has a gallery-like quality, as if it’s part cafe, part art installati­on. The organizati­on of colours and geometry within this volume exhibit a sense of ordered, deliberate composure. Although perceived as colourful, the range of hues are quite restrained and are unwavering in their consistenc­y. For example, the mint of the Luke Mills stools perfectly matches the Mattiazzi chairs. The peachy pink in the floor tiles and the powdercoat­ed steel work are also identical. Similarly, the geometries are reduced to either straight lines and circles or partial circles only. Through the distilled use of colour and simple geometry, the space has abstractne­ss about it. It is at once playful and ordered.

Vacation Cafe is the result of the fluid and synchroniz­ed understand­ing between designer and owner. The outcome is a fun and cheeky energy unfolding in a gallery-like context. It’s like a playground for grown-ups – it’s no wonder it’s called Vacation Cafe. A

Project —

Vacation Cafe 1 Exhibition Street Melbourne Vic 3000 +61 3 9662 2013 info@itsavacati­on.com itsavacati­on.com

Design practice — Therefore Studio 4,

1 Harrison Place Fitzroy Vic 3065 +61 3 9419 6079 info@therefore.com.au therefore.com.au

Project team — Alex Lake, Anouska Milstein, Raphael Graham

Time schedule — Design, documentat­ion: 4 months Constructi­on: 2 months

Builder —

CBD Contractin­g

Engineer — Meyer Consulting

ESD —

Nick Bishop ESD

Building surveyor — Steve Watson & Partners

Access consultant — Before Compliance

Branding — The Company You Keep Products — Walls and ceilings: White set hard plaster with beeswax finish over existing masonry. Ceilings painted in Dulux ‘Whisper White.’

Windows and doors: Custom fabricated steel windows and doors in matte black.

Flooring: Encaustic Cement Tile in ‘Stone Light,’ ‘French Blue,’ ‘Miami Green’ and ‘Soft Pink’ from Bespoke Tiles and Stone.

Joinery: Banquettes upholstere­d in Raf Simons Pilot fabric from Kvadrat Maharam. Custom steel joinery powdercoat­ed in Dulux ‘Wedgewood.’ Vinyl bar and tabletops in Taralay Premium Compact surface in ‘Nauru’ from Gerflor.

Lighting: Muller van Severen Hanging lamp in blue from Matter. Rich Brilliant Willing Crisp wall sconce in white from Living Edge. Laal Conehome Single Arch pendant. Binario track lighting and Mattia downlights from Sphera.

Furniture: Custom steel furniture powdercoat­ed in custom pink. Mattiazzi Solo chair from District. Ranger stool in custom colour from Life Space Journey. Custom-made powdercoat­ed steel table with vinyl top.

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