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Wexler’s BBQ Restaurant by Aidlin Darling Design
Bridging the gap between the historic facade and the new interior space within, Aidlin Darling Design designed Wexler’s barbeque restaurant with an incredible undulating ceiling that is evocative of both charred wood and a plume of smoke. Created out of laser cut MDF and painted black, this ceiling installation billows through a refined palette of zinc and rift-sawn oak before emerging as the restaurant’s entry canopy.
site: Aidlin Darling Design Wexler’s BBQ Restaurant by Aidlin Darling Design
Bridging the gap between the historic facade and the new interior space within, Aidlin Darling Design designed Wexler’s barbeque restaurant with an incredible undulating ceiling that is evocative of both charred wood and a plume of smoke. Created out of laser cut MDF and painted black, this ceiling installation billows through a refined palette of zinc and rift-sawn oak before emerging as the restaurant’s entry canopy.
site: Aidlin Darling Design Wexler’s BBQ Restaurant by Aidlin Darling Design
Bridging the gap between the historic facade and the new interior space within, Aidlin Darling Design designed Wexler’s barbeque restaurant with an incredible undulating ceiling that is evocative of both charred wood and a plume of smoke. Created out of laser cut MDF and painted black, this ceiling installation billows through a refined palette of zinc and rift-sawn oak before emerging as the restaurant’s entry canopy.
site: Aidlin Darling Design Wexler’s BBQ Restaurant by Aidlin Darling Design
Bridging the gap between the historic facade and the new interior space within, Aidlin Darling Design designed Wexler’s barbeque restaurant with an incredible undulating ceiling that is evocative of both charred wood and a plume of smoke. Created out of laser cut MDF and painted black, this ceiling installation billows through a refined palette of zinc and rift-sawn oak before emerging as the restaurant’s entry canopy.
site: Aidlin Darling Design Wexler’s BBQ Restaurant by Aidlin Darling Design
Bridging the gap between the historic facade and the new interior space within, Aidlin Darling Design designed Wexler’s barbeque restaurant with an incredible undulating ceiling that is evocative of both charred wood and a plume of smoke. Created out of laser cut MDF and painted black, this ceiling installation billows through a refined palette of zinc and rift-sawn oak before emerging as the restaurant’s entry canopy.
site: Aidlin Darling Design
Cross Piece Grille Wood Ceilings by 9Wood
The Tacoma Center for Urban Waters, a unique research and environmental laboratory that reacts to its environmental conditions and then alters itself in order to minimize its energy use, features 9Wood’s Cross Piece Grille wood ceilings throughout. These linear wood ceilings were re-milled from Douglas Fir timbers that were reclaimed from an old dock on the job site.
site: 9Wood
Pop Plywood Ceiling & Wall Panels by BRAIN.WOOD
Manufactured in Finland by BRAIN.WOOD, POP was developed by Jaana Ylitalo while she was studying industrial design at Helsinki University of Arts and Crafts. POP is a three-dimensional form pressed plywood panel system that is available in light birch, warm cherry, rich walnut and acoustical cork veneers. To create perfectly tailored edges, concealed aluminum fittings are utilized in the mounting of each plywood panel.
site: BRAIN.WOOD
Organtex Wood Fiber Acoustical Ceiling Panels by Acoustigreen
Manufactured from start to finish using low-energy manufacturing and advanced green chemistry, Organtex acoustical ceiling panels are made from 100% recycled wood fiber. These highly textural panels are available in nine colors - with some featuring individually pigmented fibers for consistent color throughout.
site: Acoustigreen
Antique Wood Beam Ceilings by Veser’s Antique Woods
Aged between 100 and 200 years old, these hand hewn beams are pulled from historical barns, factories and warehouses across North America. Hand hewn beams were created during a time when saw mills did not exist, and are highly coveted by wood connoisseurs because they exhibit the original traces of every axe cut.
site: Veser’s Antique Woods