Voyager Espresso Submerged Beneath the New York City's Financial District Subway | Yellowtrace

Voyager Espresso Submerged Beneath the New York City's Financial District Subway | Yellowtrace

Voyager Espresso Submerged Beneath the New York City's Financial District Subway | Yellowtrace

Voyager Espresso Submerged Beneath the New York City's Financial District Subway | Yellowtrace

 

Submerged in the subway beneath New York City’s Financial District, Voyager Espresso is a new speciality coffee bar inspired by the intergalactic world. The space is owned by Aussie expat Aaron Barnard, who commissioned Only If to translate his artistic-come-scientific approach to brewing coffee into the design of the unusually located space.

Barnard was very keen to avoid the clichéd design language normally associated with artisanal coffee culture (think subway tiles, recycled timber, exposed bulbs and handwritten signs), and we salute him for trying something new – it’s super refreshing to see and we love what his team has come up with.

 

Voyager Espresso Submerged Beneath the New York City's Financial District Subway | Yellowtrace

Voyager Espresso Submerged Beneath the New York City's Financial District Subway | Yellowtrace

Voyager Espresso Submerged Beneath the New York City's Financial District Subway | Yellowtrace

 

The repetition of circular forms enforces the lunar aesthetic, seen in the globular volumes in the space planning, perforated material use and rounded furniture selections. The space planning features two large circle volumes; one for service that reads as a positive volume, and another hollowed out bunker-style space for seating. These volumes create a variety of social settings for patrons – intimate or exposed, solo or collective.

Spaceship-esque lighting strips accentuate the curved forms, and the material palette of perforated aluminium, black marble, copper, black rubber and blocked lunar colours complete the futuristic aesthetic. A stand out feature is the wall cladding, crafted with orient strand board that has been given a lick of aluminium enamel paint – a budget friendly yet unexpectedly luxe technique. We applaud them!

 

Related Posts:
Stories On Design // Perfectly Perforated.
Beautiful Buildings Below The Ground.

 


[Images courtesy of Only If. Photography courtesy of Michael Vahrenwald (Esto).]

 

2 Responses

  1. kennethmason1kapm

    This place looks as inviting as an operating room. When people say ‘coffee shop’ this is not what appears in my mind’s eye.

    Cold, stark and impersonal. Perhaps it looks this way to make people leave as soon as they get their coffee.

    Really don’t mean to be so down, but this place is the pits. Under the finacial district seems an apt location.

    kapm

    Reply
    • Alice Edmonds

      I agree with the aesthetic evaluation – but I thought that might have been what they were going for. That subway coldness and drear.

      Reply

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