Project Details
- Project Name
- Milo + Olive
- Location
- California
- Project Types
- Commercial
- Project Scope
- Renovation/Remodel
- Awards
- 2015 Remodeling Design Awards
- Team
-
David Montalba
Ben Lunsky
- Project Status
- Built
Project Description
While a second-year architectural student, David
Montalba received this valuable piece of advice that he has carried with him
throughout his career: “If the idea behind your project is not essential to the
building, it will get cut, so make sure your ideas are rooted in pragmatism.” This
was especially relevant when he approached the remodel of the restaurant/bakery
Milo + Olive, where Montalba was charged with merging two seemingly disparate spaces—an
artisanal wood-fired pizza restaurant and a high-end bakery—into one cohesive area
while creating a unique environment that married old architecture and modern design.
The restaurant was brought to life through an industrial
open kitchen concept that draws on the use of utilitarian materials. Precise
elements such the thin blackened steel of the storefront that splits up urban
façade, monolithic communal tables that feature a huge blackened steel base, unfinished
exposed brick walls, open shelves with hand-stenciled signs, and the creative
use of millwork and plywood all encourage a practical yet playful eating and cooking
arena.
Perhaps the most compelling aspect of the project is
the lightbox that hangs above the cooking stations. Constructed of painted wood covered in custom designed,
zinc sheet metal panels, the fixture serves two purposes: First, it disperses
natural light that filters from skylights above throughout the space and
literally “sculpts” the architecture, Montalba says. Second, it allows for open
beams in the ceiling. Los Angeles County does not permit exposed wood in a food
preparation area, but by installing the lightbox, it became a code-compliant
measure.
“It’s a really high design element that was rooted in a practical, solution-oriented
idea,” Montalba says.