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Bringing Together All Forms of Design

This past weekend I celebrated my birthday in one of my favorite ways: dining out with family and friends. One of the dinners was at one of my all-time favorite restaurants.

If you haven’t been to the new Nobu Honolulu yet, you should go. The space is beautiful — airy, sleek, elegant and modern. It’s not just the visual feast that greets your eyes when you enter, it’s the wealth of small details that keep you riveted.

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Straight, contemporary lines mix with organic shapes and curves. A low table carved from the trunk of an old tree retains its muted grays. Nearby, a towering sculpture mimics the shapes of mushrooms sprouting from a tree.

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I loved how simple slats of wood formed a wave, and how at sunset, they were backlit and the restaurant glowed. But what struck me most was how the design mirrored the food: sophisticated yet simple, like the elegant creations on stark white plates, but with the sum of the parts adding up to so much more.

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Here’s an example. You can see the undulating wave of light-colored wood in the photo above, but what’s not shown is a nearby section of chocolate-colored charred noroshi wood.

 

The juxtaposition mirrored my favorite dish, Nobu’s classic black cod saikyo miso. The charred-skin cod against the light lotus chips, the dollops of sweet miso glaze, the bright pink pops of myoga — everything was done to delicious perfection.

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As a designer, I love it when restaurants put as much thought into design as they do into food. Of course, the most important part of a celebration is the people you’re with. But being surrounded by family and friends in a fan tastic atmosphere is always the icing on the proverbial cake. Somehow it just makes the food taste even better!

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