Interiors agency UNC Studio has remodeled a conventional wood home in Kyoto right into a Japanese-Mexican fusion cafe and eatery with a daring, all-red inside.
Challe cafe, which options on the shortlist for Dezeen Awards 2025, serves speciality espresso, Japanese tacos and churros to prospects in Kyoto’s Kamigyo Ward.
The inside design by UNC Studio mirrors the cafe’s idea of mixing Japanese and Mexican components, whereas retaining the character of the standard machiya townhouse.
“In renovating an outdated Japanese wood home, we didn’t wish to create an orthodox Mexican picture,” defined studio founder Keiji Kadota. “As an alternative, we imagined a fusion of contemporary Mexican and Japanese model.”

The lengthy, slender property includes a typical shopfront on the bottom flooring, which might be solely opened or closed off utilizing full-height wood doorways.
The renovation retained many of the constructing’s present pillars, beams and different structural components. The low-ceilinged floor flooring is given a higher sense of top and quantity by introducing a void that connects this house with the room upstairs.

“The visible continuity created by the atrium encourages interactive communication between the bottom flooring counter and the primary flooring seating space,” Kadota mentioned.
Supplies eliminated as a part of the transformation had been reused wherever doable, together with columns that had been transformed into cabinets and benches, typically ome of that are supported by salvaged cornerstones.

The whole inside is colored a deep shade of crimson utilizing paint made with persimmon tannins and a pigment constituted of iron rust.
In accordance with the architects, the wealthy crimson hue contributes to a “Mexican ambiance” that fuses with the historic Japanese structure to offer a “distinctive depth” to the house.

The bottom flooring’s distinctive tiles had been custom-made by a ceramics studio utilizing a crimson glaze that enhances the remainder of the inside. An identical ornamental reduction on the wood doorways provides depth to those surfaces.
Reasonably than putting in typical ceiling lights, a collection of fixtures constituted of commonplace metal sections and lamp components are mounted to the pillars to light up the painted ceiling and partitions.

Shingle-covered tea room for one sits in Kyoto mountains
The bar counter is wrapped in leather-based, which was additionally used for the floor of the counter-style desk on the primary flooring. The fabric was chosen for its capability to develop a horny patina over time.
Stools surrounding the communal desk had been made by combining stable wood blocks of various shapes. The timber was seared utilizing the standard yakisugi technique, which strengthens and preserves the fabric’s floor.

Machiya townhouses are an vital a part of Kyoto’s heritage that recall its historical past as a thriving service provider city within the Meiji period.
Reusing these buildings in ways in which appeals to native residents may also help to confront inhabitants decline in areas the place tourism is having a adverse influence, Kadota argues.

“This venture will not be a mere preservation of a historic constructing, however an area the place custom and innovation, previous and current, Japan and Mexico intersect,” he defined .”It presents new potentialities for native structure within the world age.”
Different examples of contemporary machiya conversions embrace a retailer designed by Schemata Architects for perfumery model Le Labo and a noodle restaurant that mixes conventional particulars with trendy geometric interventions.
The pictures is courtesy of UNC Studio.











