An other-worldly dining experience with Neolith
Imagine dining on a faraway planet or in a phantasmagorical space never before experienced? If you can imagine it, then perhaps you can experience it for yourself? There is no other way to explain the new Spanish restaurant known as Enigma, now established in Barcelona.
Neolith® by TheSize has collaborated with 2017’s Pritzker prize winning-firm RCR Arquitectes and renowned Catalan chef Albert Adrià to create a ‘frozen and enigmatic’ restaurant interior in Enigma, Barcelona. Adrià — who is known for his experimental cuisine and surprising menus — spent three years planning the project, and sought to develop a setting that reflected his avant-garde offerings.
“The type of cuisine we make is determined by the space,” he explains. “If we were, for example, surrounded by nature, we would cook entirely different dishes.” Adrià’s vision began to take shape once he met with RCR Arquitectes, who created a large watercolour drawing that outlined the design concept. Working alongside architect Pau Llimona, the team decided to bring the project to life using Neolith, a material developed by TheSize. RCR wanted to apply the watercolour effect to the entirety of the sintered stone interior — something that had not been achieved before. Through extensive research and development, Neolith developed the technology to recreate the design on slabs, producing a replica of the drawing. “We had to expand the original design, all the while trying not to lose the quality of definition offered by the original drawing,” explains Carlos Garcia, Product Designer at TheSize. “Each pixel was equal to two meters of final floor.” Once this was achieved, an exact colour match had to be sourced in order to fit in with the other materials and decorations found throughout the restaurant. As each slab is unique, and has to fit perfectly in place, Enigma’s large floor area presented the biggest challenge. Consequently, Neolith initially installed the entire floor off-site and used a drone to take images from above, ensuring that there were no inconsistencies. the restaurant’s curves and narrow aisles meant that some slabs had to be precisely cut into smaller pieces — some just 3 centimetres wide.
Taking inspiration from cartography, a coordinate system was used to label every slab in order to know its exact position. The pieces could then be assembled on site like a giant 3D jigsaw puzzle. “We like the idea that it is an enigma, which is difficult to explain,” says RCR Arquitectes. “It is an enveloping space that melts, disappears, almost a labyrinth. between materiality and conformation, a whole series of organic movements is created. shadows, transparencies, and a watery presence, nebular.” The result is something unlike anything that has been seen and used in restaurant design in the past.
We are excited by the possibilities that this new concept presents for the world of interior design and we look forward to even greater innovations from the Neolith professionals in the near future.
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