Renesa completes “grotto-like” interior for Tin Tin restaurant

Green mosaic interior of the Tin Tin restaurant by Renesa

Indian architecture and interiors studio Renesa has completed a restaurant in Chandigarh with curving walls, ceilings and countertops blanketed in mosaic tiles.

Tin Tin is a pan-Asian dining venue with an experimental menu, which New Delhi-based Renesa was asked to reflect in its design for the restaurant’s interior.

Green mosaic interior of Chandigarh restaurant by Renesa
The Tin Tin restaurant features curved walls and countertops

The studio aimed to create a rich and engaging experience for guests, unfolding gradually as they move around the space.

This is achieved by breaking up Tin Tin’s floor plan with curved walls and built-in furnishings that combine to from various different seating nooks and zones.

Green mosaic interior of the Tin Tin restaurant
A gridded mosaic covers surfaces across the restaurant

“Sweeping arches, contoured ceilings and a juxtaposition amidst solid and voided structures dot the layout,” Renesa said.

“These conjure focal nodes and morphing vistas as one lets the eye take in the space, only to reveal that no two sights within the interior volume can be identical.”

Green mosaic interior of Chandigarh restaurant by Renesa
Renesa designed the restaurant interior to reflect Tin Tin’s experimental menu

The fluidity of the restaurant’s internal surfaces is accentuated by the mosaic tiles that are arranged into a rough grid pattern across its walls, floors and openings.

The surfaces were cast on site using terrazzo combined with slices of Indian stone in shades of jade, umber brown, veined white and greige.

Renesa says Tin Tin’s “minimalist grotto-like feel” is a result of this homogenous materiality, which took a team of stonemasons and plasterers more than six months to complete.

The built-in elements are complemented by a range of custom-made furniture featuring similar curvilinear silhouettes and a matching colour palette.

The restaurant’s entrance flows into an open space containing a range of freestanding high tables and communal seating areas, offering an array of dining experiences.

Green mosaic interior of the Tin Tin restaurant
Custom-made furniture separates different dining zones

Tin Tin also provides varying degrees of privacy, allowing it to be transformed from a fine dining space during the day to a lively lounge in the evening.

A large terrace featuring the same decor as the internal dining space provides additional seating in the daytime, while at night the tabletops and bar areas are illuminated by spotlights from above to create an intimate atmosphere.

Green mosaic interior of Chandigarh restaurant by Renesa
The curved elements contrast with their gridded surface pattern

Renesa was founded in 2006 and is led by architect Sanjay Arora and his son Sanchit.

Previous projects from the studio include an all-day cafe in New Delhi that juxtaposes terracotta and terrazzo surfaces, and a brick manufacturer’s showroom in the same city that is clad entirely in earthy-hued masonry.

The photography is by Niveditaa Gupta.

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