Subscribe to Interior Design
Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Sleepless in Seattle

Jacob Ward -- Interior Design, 5/1/2003 12:00:00 AM

Until recently, 30-year-old Carl Hoffman had only retail experience under his architectural belt. So he had to do some convincing to secure the renovation contract for Blu, a nightclub in Seattle. "Just like retail design, a club has to have its finger on the pulse," he proclaimed to his prospective clients. They agreed. Hoffman's firm, Container, got the job, and Blu got a fabulous face-lift—a sleek standout in the capital of grunge.

Hoffman preserved the one-story building's existing aluminum cladding but added a dotted appliqué to the windows. Inside, he divided the single-story space in two. For the 2,000-square-foot front room, the client requested an illuminated dance floor; Hoffman responded with sturdy aluminum grating over fluorescent tubes, then hung a video screen above. Sheet vinyl covers the surrounding floor.

The room's focal point is, naturally, the bar. Behind is a wall of up-lit tinted-blue frosted acrylic, to which Hoffman attached custom MDF shelves. The bar itself, faced in backlit blue frosted acrylic and topped with stainless steel, curves around a sidewall to form the support for the waist-level parapet of a mezzanine balcony. "If there're only walls to lean against, the mood becomes dull," says the architect.

An eye-catching stairway, fitted out with risers of fluorescent-lit white acrylic, leads to the 1,000-square-foot rear lounge. Here, Hoffmann applied a basic retail principle: Make the back of a space visually enticing to draw in the customer. In this case, he employed a lowered ceiling of acoustical stretch vinyl with a silver-gloss finish, a bar with an up-lit clear-embossed and frosted-acrylic top, and brushed-aluminum stools.

Completing the project taught Hoffmann an essential difference between store design and club design. "In terms of sturdy treatments, retail is a step above residential," he says. "Clubs are a whole other level."

Clockwise from top left: In the rear lounge at Blu, a new nightclub in Seattle, Carl Hoffman installed a lowered ceiling of silver-finished stretch vinyl and built an acrylic-topped bar; the stools are brushed aluminum. Fluorescents lend a glow to the front room's aluminum-grate dance floor, acrylic back bar, and acrylic stair risers. A staircase ascends to a mezzanine balcony.

Stools (lounge): Pure Design. Ceiling fixtures: Erco. Ceiling fabric: Newmat; Snap-Tex (installation). Bar-face plastic laminate (lounge, front room): Abet. TVs, video screen: NEC Corporation. Back-bar frosted acrylic (front room): Lumicor. Up-lights, down-lights: Bartco lighting. Metalwork: Schneider-Simpson Sheet Metal & Blower Co. Flooring: Lonseal. AV consultant: Cello Technologies. Architect of record: Huntley Architecture.

Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Talkback
Related Content
»MORE

Advertisement
More Content
  • Photos

On the Phone

From the Magazine:
Gensler dialed up bright color for Nokia in Silicon Valley--and the IIDA answered with an award.
+ Read the Article

Just for Kids

From the Magazine:
Two schools in the southern German town of Tuttlingen share this student center, one of the few that's both freestanding and purpose-built.
Firm: Heinisch Lembach Huber Architekten
Site: Tuttlingen, Germany
+ Read the Article

A Cinematic Moment

From the Magazine:
In Vila do Conde, Portugal, a mansion from the 1500's now houses the Saint Roch Solar Gallery cultural center, as well as a dormitory for the Superior School of Industrial Studies and Managment.
+ Read the Article

twitter
about us   |   Site Map   |   contact us   |   Industry Links   |   Subscriber Services   |   editorial calendar & submissions   |   RSS   |   media kit
© 2012 Sandow Media LLC.All rights reserved.
Use of this website is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy