London based Unknown construction A sound wall is rebuilt Galvanised Steel And sheet-matel furniture and fitting pair to make salt salon Salon“In Boro Market.
Located at a former storehouse in London’s busy Boro Market area, the hairdressing salon was designed to feel like a shelter away from the roads below.
Unknown construction Focus on both practical and social aspects of space, which will serve as a hair salon along with an event and hearing place.
Most of the original structure of the building was retained, and the studio worked with recycled materials wherever possible.
“We set a bold yet to create a sophisticated salon that doubles as a dynamic cultural center,” told Deedan, director of the unknown work.
“The sound became our primary tool for spatial changes, expanding how diverse audiences connect with space, while it lies more accessible and deeply in the community of salt salon.”
“Design encourages people to move liquidly between these different atmosphere, infection between intimate treatment, cultural programming and sound experiences,” he continued.
Salt salon Spread over three floors, each of which has a separate function and specific design. On the first floor, visitors are met by a statement installation-a custom-made sound wall that has been developed with a high-fi start-up Sociable pressure,
The galvanized-steel wall was made from Victoria and Belith House Storage Facility of Albert Museum from Salvaj metals and shelves.
“We work with many cultural institutions and first worked with the Museum of Science in the new energy revolution gallery,” Hayes explained.
“During the project, we began to recover the material from the Blythe House collection facility – which experiment with both science museum and V&A – and the robots,” he said.
“This research and development enabled us to reproduce galvanized steel for sound walls and furniture. Using these recurrent materials, durable, high quality components with a story that connect the project to a comprehensive cultural network.”
It is called the appropriate hearing floor, it also keeps hairdressing stations along with the first floor reception, but can also be used as events and once.
The next floor, in the cutting floor, there are more hairdressing stations and also have a lot of metals, including mirrors that were made of polish steel.
Unknown tasks were conscious of acousal challenges that could come up with steel and take steps to ensure that the salon would also be suitable for listening space.
Hayes said, “Metal was central for durability, but we carefully managed its acoustic challenges: the anxiety plan and non-human walls of the building reduce the echoes, and the foam-based modular furniture softens the sound reflections,” Hes said.
“The exposed parquet also helps to spread the sound naturally.”
On the third floor, the color floor, designers created a calm environment for those who come for long treatment, such as color.
While this room is also filled with metal, the plan is for its floor that eventually becomes stain with a hair dye to reflect the process in the space.
“Celebrates the character of each building as a historical store for Boro Market,” Hayes said about various floors.
“The opening between the floor to create vertical connections while maintaining personal character: three floors, connected through three personality, materials and sounds.”
Along with the sound wall of the first floor sound, unknown functions designed all integrated joinry including modular furniture, bar units and wall lights for the salon.
“Development of our studio research and growing metals has exposed new formal possibilities that cannot get to involve traditional metal work and do not get custom loudspeakers with cooperation of favorable pressure,” Hayes explained.
“Recycled steel was re -designed to create a sound wall, receiving physical sovereignty from disposal to installation.”
The Salt Salon is the second London site of the brand in the Boro Market, after its location in Dalston, and founder John Paul Scott said the new location completely “fulfilled his brief to not look or feel like a specific salon.”
“It was an energy that surprised people, almost challenged the expectations of what a hairdressing space could be,” he told Dezen.
“Unknown tasks understood that immediately, and the result is close to a contemporary site than a salon – a place that feels alive and uniquely.”
Recently involved in other hair salons depicted on Desanne Barsilona Salon designed for climbing hairy customers And one East London Salon is built from plant-based materials,
Is by photography Henry Void,