The interior of GRASS was built around the idea of natural presence — not as decoration, but as an environment that shapes perception.
Plants are integrated into the architecture. Dwarf trees help zone the dining area, creating a sense of privacy without solid partitions. Live greenery is embedded into the furniture — not added on, but constructed as part of it.
Materiality here is tactile by design.
Brick, solid wood, ceramic granite, and cast concrete contribute to the physical experience of the space — each surface offering its own temperature, texture, and weight. Natural stones in the washroom areas further enhance the sense of raw, grounded relief.
Graphite-colored steel frames provide visual structure and clarity.
The lighting is warm and subdued, highlighting textures and softening the atmosphere. It’s not just illumination — it’s part of the spatial rhythm.
GRASS isn’t about nature as a theme.
It’s about nature embedded in everyday logic — a setting where architecture slows the rhythm, enhances focus, and lets taste take the lead.