From sushi, Singaporean meals, and, after all, tacos, eating places in Mexico Metropolis have all of it. For this week’s lookbook, we dive into restaurant interiors within the metropolis that utilise formal improvements and supplies to showcase its world-class delicacies.
With the town’s artwork week simply having handed, Mexico Metropolis artwork and design are entrance and centre.
The eight eating places under, opened within the final 4 years, showcase not solely the sweetness however the rigour of design within the metropolis round one thing taken very significantly – meals.
But it surely’s not all tacos and terracotta; these eating places range in supplies, types and site, exhibiting the breadth of favor within the metropolis.
That is the newest in our lookbooks sequence, which gives visible inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. For extra inspiration, see earlier lookbooks that includes world wine bars, shoji screens, and residential saunas.
Makan by Locus
Native studio Locus designed this Singaporean meals restaurant to suit right into a concrete-framed area on the base of a mid-rise constructing.
Remarkably, the studio managed to make use of 50 per cent recycled supplies for the inside, which options built-in wooden parts in addition to screened-in eating areas.
Discover out extra about Makan ›

Los Alexis by RA!
This taco restaurant within the metropolis’s Roma Norte neighbourhood was decked out by native studio RA! in 1000’s of tile shards – a homage to the chef Alexis Ayala’s time spent in Barcelona.
The compact area is centred by an open kitchen hemmed in by a steel-topped bar and a inexperienced, ribbed materials, with the scheme inverted to shroud the venting parts above.
Discover out extra about Los Alexis ›

Órale Milanga by MYT+GLVDK
This fast-casual restaurant is devoted nearly fully to the Milanese dish and options overlays of inexperienced steel and mesh all through – from the edges of the bar to the intensive shelving.
Modernist-style tubular chairs with beige and olive leather-based mirror the color scheme of the area, with mirrors lining the partitions to create visible growth.
Discover out extra about Órale Milanga ›Â

Ninyas by Ignacio Urquiza and Ana Paula de Alba
The design scheme for this restaurant fuses its two fundamental choices, steak and sake, mixing Japanese and Mexican sensibilities.
To discover a commonality, the designers relied closely on chrome steel. Picket stools got stainless-steel footrests, and an earthy pink flooring gives distinction.
Discover out extra about Ninyas ›

Plumbago by OPA
Two gabled volumes lined in polycarbonate panels on an infill lot create mushy mild for this lately opened Mediterranean restaurant within the metropolis.
The studio stored the principle eating area open and lined it with cinder block and brickwork that showcases varied building strategies.
Discover out extra about Plumbago ›

Savvia by Worc Studio
The design on this tall-ceilinged area was carried out to mirror the delicacies, conventional and communal.
Situated within the historic core of the town, Savvia includes a huge wood-topped communal desk with a round chandelier above, with the kitchen elevated to the second flooring to create more room for diners.
Discover out extra about Savvia ›

Oku Pedregal by Michan Structure and Escala Arquitectos
One in all two Oku sushi eating places on this metropolis, this most-recent outpost within the Jardines de Pedregal neighbourhood options teardrop-shaped eating areas partially suspended from the ceiling.
The restaurant’s materials palette is mild, that includes pine-clad surfaces, pigmented stucco and GFRC panelling.
Discover out extra about Oku Pedregal ›

Tana by RA!
This moody Polanco bar sells tapas and drinks in a compact, 65-square-metre area with closely textured partitions and concrete pendant lamps.
The area is centred on a large concrete bar created within the form of an inverted pyramid, harking back to Aztec structure.
Discover out extra about Tana ›
That is the newest in our lookbooks sequence, which gives visible inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. For extra inspiration, see earlier lookbooks that includes world wine bars, shoji screens, and residential saunas.










