4. In the modern, aggressively commercial world, shopping is an important activity, and shops form the setting for a wide range of practical and emotional experiences. Shops, Shopping Centers and Showrooms
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29. Restaurants in small spaces New World Café: New world café also presents an open-front view of the entire shop. The lettering and trademark on the window, the bagged coffee beans on display, and the coffee brewing machinery behind the counter act together to set off the prospective customer’s urge to taste the special coffee flavors the shop offers. The angled rear wall, an oddity of the tiny space, has been turned into an advantage: the green-gold wall is brightly lit to pull attention into the depth of the shop. The architect, Ronnette Riley, has also used the wall as the basis for the angled counter, generating a triangular form that suggests movement and activity while also maximizing length. The eight lights hanging in a closely spaced row above the counter further emphasize the angle. The triangular theme is reinforced in the window logo, a triangle containing a globe, with rays suggestive of steaming coffee rising from it.
30. Work Spaces: The interiors of factories, workshops, laboratories, Land power plants rarely receive professional interior design attention. Their strictly functional purposes have kept them within the province of engineers and technicians. Interested visitors are always impressed by a steel mill, an auto factory, or a powerhouse, and the impression is heightened when the space is treated visually to make it understandable, provocative-, and even beautiful. The engine room of a ship is often one of the most handsome were visual design can help to make the technical realities attractive, interesting, and exciting in a way that helps public understanding while supporting staff pride and morale.