IN SITU, San Francisco, California | 2016
Architects: Aidlin Darling Design
Design Team: David Darling, Joshua Aidlin, Adam Rouse, Roslyn Cole, Ryan Hughes, Jeff LaBoskey, and Kent Chiang
Client: In Situ
In Situ represents a unique and rich intersection of art, design, and food, each augmenting the other to reimagine museum dining, and our relationships with food.
In support of Chef Corey Lee’s vision and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s (SFMoMA) greater mission, the design emphasizes visibility from the street, open accessibility to visitors and a sense of the ephemeral within a simple, comfortable environment.
Inhabiting street-front space in the existing shell of the Mario Botta-designed portion of the recently reopened SFMoMA, the interior volumes of the previous museum café and an assembly hall were excavated, and let partially raw and exposed.
Inserted in to this excavation is an interplay of floating white art walls, carefully placed to bracket space within the larger expanse of the restaurant. Strategically placed steel apertures and felt acoustic panels calibrate the zones of passage, both visual and physical, between the street and the restaurant, as well as the restaurant and the existing museum’s atrium. Together with the raw shell, these layers create a backdrop for discreetly placed “artifacts,” analogous to ingredients in their various states of refinement, strategically employed to engage the guest’s physical experience. All were inspired thru a collaborative process with the intent of drawing contrast between the rough and the refined: custom designed lighting, custom furniture and a sculptural wood ceiling.
Approaching the restaurant off of the main thoroughfare of the street, a new steel window box and wooden door are incised onto the existing fabric of the storefront.
Additional steel portals are inserted through the existing skin of museums wood paneled atrium; affording views from the atrium in to the restaurant, and vice versa, an evocation of a restaurant occupying the space along a public piazza.
Once inside, an informal standing and sitting lounge area on the street side of the restaurant is envisioned as a shared living room for the street and museum, supporting a convivial atmosphere. Toward the back of the restaurant adjacent to the museum’s atrium, a quiet formal dining experience is supported by a more intimately scaled and acoustically muted space.
An ephemeral full wall mural by Rosana Castrillo Diaz was commissioned for the energy of the front lounge area, while an aggregation of gold framed illustrations by Tucker Nichols was commissioned for subtle rigor of the dining area, tasked with drawing the eye from the street through the restaurant. The final art wall sets up a neutral canvas for a linear constellation of diners perched along a minimal banquette, making the patrons, and ultimately the food they are presented with, as the final ever changing daily art commission.
In Situ operates at many different scales from urban to in mate, designed to engage all of the senses with an emphasis on tactility and acoustics.
Architects: Aidlin Darling Design
Design Team: David Darling, Joshua Aidlin, Adam Rouse, Roslyn Cole, Ryan Hughes, Jeff LaBoskey, and Kent Chiang
Client: In Situ
General Contractor: Plant Construction
Lighting Consultant: JS Nolan & Associates
Kitchen Designers: Harrison & Koellner LLC
Wood Ceiling: Acosta and Sons, Inc.
Wood Supplier and Custom Lounge Table Fabricator: Evan Shively - Arborica
Custom Table Fabricators: Northwood Design Partners
Custom Pendant Lighting: Boyd Lighting
Custom Server Credenza: Concreteworks
Artistis: Tucker Nicols and Rosana Castrillo Diaz
Photographers: Matthew Millman Adam Rouse Alanna Hale