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A WORK OF ART

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LITTLE ITALY

LITTLE ITALY

For 53, a new restaurant adjoining the MoMA in Midtown, ICrave’s palette tastefully blends Asian, custom, and contemporary sensibilities

A successful restaurant in New York must be “yummy,” according to Lionel Ohayon. The designer isn’t simply referring to the food, however. Rather, it’s the entire experience that comes from carefully combining lighting, acoustics, materiality, layout, visual impact, and a sense of discovery, together compelling diners to return time and again. “What are yummy rooms?” he asks rhetorically. “They’re the enduring restaurants that have lasted forever, and people just know that they want to spend time in them. It’s so much to do with the entire package.”

That’s exactly what ICrave, where Ohayon is founder and CEO, intended for 53, an already buzzy Midtown restaurant developed by Altamarea Group and helmed by Singaporean chef Akmal Anuar. Its prime location is nestled at the base of Ateliers Jean Nouvel’s 53 West 53, a much-publicized residential tower that rises 82 stories into the Manhattan skyline as a series of carbon-gray shards, and accommodates part of the recentexpansion of the adjoining Museum of Modern Art. The restaurant’s 11,000 square feet are divided across two spaces: the street-level bistro and the subterranean main dining room. Jean Nouvel’s angular beams enable wide column-free expanses, while allowing for the creation of a sequence of intimate dining areas “framed to feel like part of the building,” Ohayon notes. However, given the proximity to a worldfamous contemporary art museum, the ICrave team decided to approach the project not as interior design, but as sculpture or a painting.

ICrave, in the words of Ohayon, is a studio of “big moves,” and, at 53, this manifests in some three dozen giant curving fins that span the full width of the restaurant. Emerging from the street-level ceiling, they cascade down in front of the bistro, swoop underneath it, and finally wrap around the ceiling plane of the main dining

Previous spread: Looking in from the sidewalk at 53, a two-level Asian-fusion restaurant in Midtown by ICrave, dozens of fins edged in aluminum, the powder-coat colors lifted from the NineDragon Wall reliefs found in Chinese imperial palaces, cascade from street level to the subterranean dining room. Opposite top: The project is nestled at the base of Ateliers Jean Nouvel’s 53 West 53 residential tower, beneath the Museum of Modern Art’s new David Geffen Wing. Opposite bottom: At street level is the more casual bistro and bar, framed by a tunnel that results from the fins, with walnut flooring and custom furnishings. Top: An arched walnut portal leads guests from the stairway down to the main dining room. Bottom: A custom rippled-glass installation backs the bistro’s bar.

room. Each fin is edged in a bright stripe, the nine nearly neon colors lifted from the Nine-Dragon Wall reliefs found in Chinese imperial palaces. The hues also nod to the varied Asian cultures and cuisines representedin the menu and the modern art on display in the museum galleries nearby. (The restaurant will also feature a rotating selection of fine art in partnership with the Friedrich Petzel Gallery.)

Glossy black on one side and sepia-toned on the other, the fin installation has a lenticular quality when moving through the restaurant or walking by on the sidewalk. Ohayon describes it as both a loom and a veil, its colored threads drawing glances from passersby through the glazing and down to an aerial diorama of tables, banquettes, and chairs on ink-wash carpet, the latter three in subtle smokey grays that echo Nouvel’s steel construction. “With hospitality projects in New York, you’re creating a piece of the landscape of the city for the people who live in it and memories for those who visit,” the designer says.

The idea for the sculptural architectural gesture stemmed from the Chinese artistic principle ofxieyi, which refers to works created with broad, expressive strokes, and it represents the chi, or energy, that flows through 53. In contrast, the principle of gongbi,that’s all about realism and fine detail, guided choices for the decor that ties the environment together. A keen eye will notice the colors from the fin edges replicated in the precious stones used as chopstick rests, for example.

Lighting, completed in collaboration with Licht, ICrave’s in-house studio, was fundamental in achieving the “yummy” atmosphere Ohayon desired. Along with coves around the perimeters of the main dining room, slender cylindrical pendant fixtures scale with the changing ceiling height, circular sconces softly illuminate the ecru suedelike walls, and an ethereal tangle of small LEDs forms a twinkling cloud above the bar. All emit 2,600 Kelvins and, assisted by rechargeable table lights sourced from Japan, cast a warm “cinematic” glow onto diners’ faces.

Materials with natural and unprocessed finishes were chosen for their honesty, like stone bar counters, white oak paneling, leather banquette upholstery, and wool rugs. Deliberately conflicting warm and cool tones further adds to the duality of hard and soft, grand and humble emphasized throughout.

After more than 20 years since founding his firm, Ohayon realized the magnitude of this project and decided to lead the design himself, a process he describes as creatively cathartic and rewarding in putting his stamp on the city today. “It was an opportunity for me to explore what I thought New York

Top: Lighting, including gold-plated pendant fixtures that scale with the ceiling height as it rises from 10 to 27 feet, was completed in collaboration with Licht, ICrave’s in-house team. Bottom: Studio Toer chandeliers hang before a fabric mural by Rareculture. Opposite top: Rounded forms dominate a dining room seating nook, where table, banquette, and sconce are all custom and a tactile microfiber covers the wall. Opposite bottom: Above the room’s leather-upholstered seating, the ceiling recess hosts a mural by Candice Kaye Design.

was, and what I thought it needed right now,” he says. “In general, there has been a Brooklyn-ification of Manhattan. Everything looks like fabricated history. It’s beautiful, but it’s just not what we were looking for here, which needed to be an expression of its location next to the MoMA, and to add an exuberance with mature restraint attached to it.”

This maturity, which comes from ICrave’s beginnings and long-standing experience in hospitality design, then its later expansion across more sectors, including healthcare, has enabled the studio to complete a restaurant interior that celebrates its cuisine without pastiche, understands and capitalizes on the importance of its context, and is ultimately just as yummy as the mango pudding on the menu.

PROJECT TEAM MICHELLE SCHRANK; RENEE JOOSTEN; GREG MERKEL; JANE YI; AMIT DISHON HOFFMAN; BINGJIE DUAN; RUDI PHAM; GISBEL VIDELA: ICRAVE. ANTHONY MRKIC ARCHITECT: ARCHITECT OF RECORD. PENTAGRAM: GRAPHICS CONSULTANT. ROSINI ENGINEERING: MEP. FERRANTE MANUFACTURING COMPANY: WOODWORK. MUNNWORKS: CUSTOM FURNITURE WORKSHOP. CERTIFIED CONSTRUCTION: GENERAL CONTRACTOR.

PRODUCT SOURCES FROM FRONT CERTIFIED SIGNS: CUSTOM SIGNAGE (EXTERIOR). DEMAR LEATHER: RED SEATING UPHOLSTERY (BISTRO). MOOOI: CHANDELIERS (DINING ROOM). CLIPSO: STRETCHED BAR FABRIC. ARCA: BAR STONE. POTOCCO: STOOLS, CHAIRS. THINKGLASS: CUSTOM INSTALLATION (BAR). EL TORRENT: CUSTOM SCONCES (DINING ROOM). HEMERA: PENDANT FIXTURES. ULTRASUEDE: WALL COVERING. ELEMENTS OF ARCHITECTURE: MIRROR. THROUGHOUT DESIGN COMMUNICATIONS: CUSTOM FINS. SOUNDPLY: PANELING. AMBIENTEC: TABLE LAMPS. FORT STREET STUDIO: CUSTOM RUGS. TIGER LEATHER: SEATING UPHOLSTERY.

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