Tipico Coffee

Tipico Coffee

A partnership with Canadian couple Julia Jamrozik & Coryn Kempster, this project was driven by a conceptual approach focused on maximizing social interactions and the bespoke use of ordinary materials, this design creates a café with a vibrant identity.

The interior occupies the main level of a century-old house, that had over the years been stripped of its charm and layered with generic modifications. To downplay the many columns and walls that interrupted the space, the layout of the interior was organized with the strategic insertion of new walls to calm the existing condition. The cafe, developed with a tight construction budget in mind, is composed of a select number of idiosyncratic elements inserted into this existing shell.

The primary component of the cafe is the bar, which is comprised of ten reclaimed wood tables that have been grafted together and painted a unifying sky-blue color. On the service side, the long bar encourages the engagement between staff and customers beyond the initial transaction, while responding to the functional needs of different work zones for the baristas. On the customer side, the undulating profile of the bar further creates opportunities for customers to interact with one another by providing places to sit for individuals and groups of various sizes, without clearly delineating where one zone starts and another begins.

The swiveling bar stools help to promote this open-ended approach, allowing individuals to move their seated body towards others to perhaps engage in conversations they did not expect to have. Thus, testing the comfort levels of occupants and promoting moments of interaction between strangers, the bar acts a social infrastructure.

Alongside the reclaimed tables, off-the-shelf materials are used in the café. This includes pegboard, which wraps the underside of the bar and is used for merchandise displays. Further, the three bespoke linear lights over the bar and benches are made from construction-site string lights wrapped around aluminum tube stock, combining the functional and the whimsical.

Overall the modest interior is guided by a desire to create a playful space that caters to functional needs while providing an idiosyncratic social infrastructure through strategic insertions.

We proudly accepted a 2020 AIA Buffalo/WNY design award for this project.

Photo: Sara Schmidle Photography

Contractor: Reuse Action

2020 Buffalo/WNY AIA Small Project Award winner.

Tipico Coffee

Tipico Coffee

A partnership with Canadian couple Julia Jamrozik & Coryn Kempster, this project was driven by a conceptual approach focused on maximizing social interactions and the bespoke use of ordinary materials, this design creates a café with a vibrant identity.

The interior occupies the main level of a century-old house, that had over the years been stripped of its charm and layered with generic modifications. To downplay the many columns and walls that interrupted the space, the layout of the interior was organized with the strategic insertion of new walls to calm the existing condition. The cafe, developed with a tight construction budget in mind, is composed of a select number of idiosyncratic elements inserted into this existing shell.

The primary component of the cafe is the bar, which is comprised of ten reclaimed wood tables that have been grafted together and painted a unifying sky-blue color. On the service side, the long bar encourages the engagement between staff and customers beyond the initial transaction, while responding to the functional needs of different work zones for the baristas. On the customer side, the undulating profile of the bar further creates opportunities for customers to interact with one another by providing places to sit for individuals and groups of various sizes, without clearly delineating where one zone starts and another begins.

The swiveling bar stools help to promote this open-ended approach, allowing individuals to move their seated body towards others to perhaps engage in conversations they did not expect to have. Thus, testing the comfort levels of occupants and promoting moments of interaction between strangers, the bar acts a social infrastructure.

Alongside the reclaimed tables, off-the-shelf materials are used in the café. This includes pegboard, which wraps the underside of the bar and is used for merchandise displays. Further, the three bespoke linear lights over the bar and benches are made from construction-site string lights wrapped around aluminum tube stock, combining the functional and the whimsical.

Overall the modest interior is guided by a desire to create a playful space that caters to functional needs while providing an idiosyncratic social infrastructure through strategic insertions.

We proudly accepted a 2020 AIA Buffalo/WNY design award for this project.

Photo: Sara Schmidle Photography

Contractor: Reuse Action

2020 Buffalo/WNY AIA Small Project Award winner.

Tipico Coffee

Tipico Coffee

A partnership with Canadian couple Julia Jamrozik & Coryn Kempster, this project was driven by a conceptual approach focused on maximizing social interactions and the bespoke use of ordinary materials, this design creates a café with a vibrant identity.

The interior occupies the main level of a century-old house, that had over the years been stripped of its charm and layered with generic modifications. To downplay the many columns and walls that interrupted the space, the layout of the interior was organized with the strategic insertion of new walls to calm the existing condition. The cafe, developed with a tight construction budget in mind, is composed of a select number of idiosyncratic elements inserted into this existing shell.

The primary component of the cafe is the bar, which is comprised of ten reclaimed wood tables that have been grafted together and painted a unifying sky-blue color. On the service side, the long bar encourages the engagement between staff and customers beyond the initial transaction, while responding to the functional needs of different work zones for the baristas. On the customer side, the undulating profile of the bar further creates opportunities for customers to interact with one another by providing places to sit for individuals and groups of various sizes, without clearly delineating where one zone starts and another begins.

The swiveling bar stools help to promote this open-ended approach, allowing individuals to move their seated body towards others to perhaps engage in conversations they did not expect to have. Thus, testing the comfort levels of occupants and promoting moments of interaction between strangers, the bar acts a social infrastructure.

Alongside the reclaimed tables, off-the-shelf materials are used in the café. This includes pegboard, which wraps the underside of the bar and is used for merchandise displays. Further, the three bespoke linear lights over the bar and benches are made from construction-site string lights wrapped around aluminum tube stock, combining the functional and the whimsical.

Overall the modest interior is guided by a desire to create a playful space that caters to functional needs while providing an idiosyncratic social infrastructure through strategic insertions.

We proudly accepted a 2020 AIA Buffalo/WNY design award for this project.

Photo: Sara Schmidle Photography

Contractor: Reuse Action

2020 Buffalo/WNY AIA Small Project Award winner.

Tipico Coffee

Tipico Coffee

A partnership with Canadian couple Julia Jamrozik & Coryn Kempster, this project was driven by a conceptual approach focused on maximizing social interactions and the bespoke use of ordinary materials, this design creates a café with a vibrant identity.

The interior occupies the main level of a century-old house, that had over the years been stripped of its charm and layered with generic modifications. To downplay the many columns and walls that interrupted the space, the layout of the interior was organized with the strategic insertion of new walls to calm the existing condition. The cafe, developed with a tight construction budget in mind, is composed of a select number of idiosyncratic elements inserted into this existing shell.

The primary component of the cafe is the bar, which is comprised of ten reclaimed wood tables that have been grafted together and painted a unifying sky-blue color. On the service side, the long bar encourages the engagement between staff and customers beyond the initial transaction, while responding to the functional needs of different work zones for the baristas. On the customer side, the undulating profile of the bar further creates opportunities for customers to interact with one another by providing places to sit for individuals and groups of various sizes, without clearly delineating where one zone starts and another begins.

The swiveling bar stools help to promote this open-ended approach, allowing individuals to move their seated body towards others to perhaps engage in conversations they did not expect to have. Thus, testing the comfort levels of occupants and promoting moments of interaction between strangers, the bar acts a social infrastructure.

Alongside the reclaimed tables, off-the-shelf materials are used in the café. This includes pegboard, which wraps the underside of the bar and is used for merchandise displays. Further, the three bespoke linear lights over the bar and benches are made from construction-site string lights wrapped around aluminum tube stock, combining the functional and the whimsical.

Overall the modest interior is guided by a desire to create a playful space that caters to functional needs while providing an idiosyncratic social infrastructure through strategic insertions.

We proudly accepted a 2020 AIA Buffalo/WNY design award for this project.

Photo: Sara Schmidle Photography

Contractor: Reuse Action

2020 Buffalo/WNY AIA Small Project Award winner.

Tipico Coffee

Tipico Coffee

A partnership with Canadian couple Julia Jamrozik & Coryn Kempster, this project was driven by a conceptual approach focused on maximizing social interactions and the bespoke use of ordinary materials, this design creates a café with a vibrant identity.

The interior occupies the main level of a century-old house, that had over the years been stripped of its charm and layered with generic modifications. To downplay the many columns and walls that interrupted the space, the layout of the interior was organized with the strategic insertion of new walls to calm the existing condition. The cafe, developed with a tight construction budget in mind, is composed of a select number of idiosyncratic elements inserted into this existing shell.

The primary component of the cafe is the bar, which is comprised of ten reclaimed wood tables that have been grafted together and painted a unifying sky-blue color. On the service side, the long bar encourages the engagement between staff and customers beyond the initial transaction, while responding to the functional needs of different work zones for the baristas. On the customer side, the undulating profile of the bar further creates opportunities for customers to interact with one another by providing places to sit for individuals and groups of various sizes, without clearly delineating where one zone starts and another begins.

The swiveling bar stools help to promote this open-ended approach, allowing individuals to move their seated body towards others to perhaps engage in conversations they did not expect to have. Thus, testing the comfort levels of occupants and promoting moments of interaction between strangers, the bar acts a social infrastructure.

Alongside the reclaimed tables, off-the-shelf materials are used in the café. This includes pegboard, which wraps the underside of the bar and is used for merchandise displays. Further, the three bespoke linear lights over the bar and benches are made from construction-site string lights wrapped around aluminum tube stock, combining the functional and the whimsical.

Overall the modest interior is guided by a desire to create a playful space that caters to functional needs while providing an idiosyncratic social infrastructure through strategic insertions.

We proudly accepted a 2020 AIA Buffalo/WNY design award for this project.

Photo: Sara Schmidle Photography

Contractor: Reuse Action

2020 Buffalo/WNY AIA Small Project Award winner.

Tipico Coffee

Tipico Coffee

A partnership with Canadian couple Julia Jamrozik & Coryn Kempster, this project was driven by a conceptual approach focused on maximizing social interactions and the bespoke use of ordinary materials, this design creates a café with a vibrant identity.

The interior occupies the main level of a century-old house, that had over the years been stripped of its charm and layered with generic modifications. To downplay the many columns and walls that interrupted the space, the layout of the interior was organized with the strategic insertion of new walls to calm the existing condition. The cafe, developed with a tight construction budget in mind, is composed of a select number of idiosyncratic elements inserted into this existing shell.

The primary component of the cafe is the bar, which is comprised of ten reclaimed wood tables that have been grafted together and painted a unifying sky-blue color. On the service side, the long bar encourages the engagement between staff and customers beyond the initial transaction, while responding to the functional needs of different work zones for the baristas. On the customer side, the undulating profile of the bar further creates opportunities for customers to interact with one another by providing places to sit for individuals and groups of various sizes, without clearly delineating where one zone starts and another begins.

The swiveling bar stools help to promote this open-ended approach, allowing individuals to move their seated body towards others to perhaps engage in conversations they did not expect to have. Thus, testing the comfort levels of occupants and promoting moments of interaction between strangers, the bar acts a social infrastructure.

Alongside the reclaimed tables, off-the-shelf materials are used in the café. This includes pegboard, which wraps the underside of the bar and is used for merchandise displays. Further, the three bespoke linear lights over the bar and benches are made from construction-site string lights wrapped around aluminum tube stock, combining the functional and the whimsical.

Overall the modest interior is guided by a desire to create a playful space that caters to functional needs while providing an idiosyncratic social infrastructure through strategic insertions.

We proudly accepted a 2020 AIA Buffalo/WNY design award for this project.

Photo: Sara Schmidle Photography

Contractor: Reuse Action

2020 Buffalo/WNY AIA Small Project Award winner.