L'Anima Restaurant
L'Anima Restaurant
L'Anima Restaurant
L'Anima Restaurant
L'Anima Restaurant
L'Anima Restaurant

L'anima Restaurant

London, 2008

The design for L’Anima (meaning ‘the soul’) intends to give customers the feeling of being in a soulful space with natural elements beautifully composed in pure, clear, geometric forms, which bond with the physical nature of the materials.

The materials selected provide the restaurant with a unique image of solidity, permanence and timeless luxury.

The main restaurant space is divided into two functions – the dining area and the bar lounge area – through the positioning of a clear glass wall.

Yet the design intentionally lines up the two areas as one. The transparent division vanishes, and one’s perception is that of a totality, of one space in which the two main functions (dining and drinking) beckon one another.

Through a curved passage of limestone walls, the customer perspective is directed towards the wine-tasting room and the VIP dining room, recalling the cells and refectories of medieval monasteries.

 

All the pictures © James Morris.

L'anima Restau- rant

London, 2008

The design for L’Anima (meaning ‘the soul’) intends to give customers the feeling of being in a soulful space with natural elements beautifully composed in pure, clear, geometric forms, which bond with the physical nature of the materials.

The materials selected provide the restaurant with a unique image of solidity, permanence and timeless luxury.

The main restaurant space is divided into two functions – the dining area and the bar lounge area – through the positioning of a clear glass wall.

Yet the design intentionally lines up the two areas as one. The transparent division vanishes, and one’s perception is that of a totality, of one space in which the two main functions (dining and drinking) beckon one another.

Through a curved passage of limestone walls, the customer perspective is directed towards the wine-tasting room and the VIP dining room, recalling the cells and refectories of medieval monasteries.

 

All the pictures © James Morris.

L'anima Restaurant

London, 2008

The design for L’Anima (meaning ‘the soul’) intends to give customers the feeling of being in a soulful space with natural elements beautifully composed in pure, clear, geometric forms, which bond with the physical nature of the materials.

The materials selected provide the restaurant with a unique image of solidity, permanence and timeless luxury.

The main restaurant space is divided into two functions – the dining area and the bar lounge area – through the positioning of a clear glass wall.

Yet the design intentionally lines up the two areas as one. The transparent division vanishes, and one’s perception is that of a totality, of one space in which the two main functions (dining and drinking) beckon one another.

Through a curved passage of limestone walls, the customer perspective is directed towards the wine-tasting room and the VIP dining room, recalling the cells and refectories of medieval monasteries.

 

All the pictures © James Morris.