Child Studio looks to worker's cafes for pink interiors of London's Humble Pizza
					Candy pink Formica surfaces help Child Studio channel the look of a 1950s cafe inside this vegan pizza place in west London.
Humble Pizza is situated on King's Road, a boutique-lined street in London's affluent Chelsea neighbourhood, and boasts a menu of exclusively plant-based pizzas.
Its almost entirely pink interiors have been designed by Child Studio to emulate the aesthetic of the workmen's cafes, commonly known as greasy spoons, which sprung up across London in the 1950s.
These cafes served no-frills food and drink and typically featured pastel-coloured surfaces made from Formica ? a laminated composite material invented in 1912.
"We have long been attracted to the cinematic quality of London's Formica cafes, the duality of modernist design language and the playful, almost cartoonish spirit," explained Chieh Huang and Alexey Kostikov, who head up the studio. "This project aims to create a contemporary version of this unique typology."
Apart from the white tile floors, surfaces throughout the eatery are clad with cherry wood-framed panels of pink Formica.
The material has also been used to cover the countertops of the circular dining tables and the service desk that sits beside the entrance.
The studio worked closely with the Formica factory to give the panels a subtle, linen-like pattern.
A candy-pink seating banquette runs towards the rear of the eatery, where a partition with a recessed rectangular opening looks through to a forest-green kitc...
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