In São Paulo’s Pinheiros neighbourhood, Gio Kitchen Atelier transforms a narrow two-storey house into a hybrid culinary environment where an industrial kitchen, creative studio and event space operate as one continuous interior.
Completed in 2025, the project by Gio Kitchen Atelier responds to the needs of a chef whose practice spans authorial gastronomy, artisanal production and brand collaborations.
At its core, the design challenge was one of constraint. The original structure featured low ceilings, masonry load-bearing walls and a fragmented internal layout that limited both production capacity and spatial clarity. The architectural response was to remove internal divisions and reinforce the building with a steel framework, enabling a fully open plan that prioritises flow and visibility.
A defining move was the complete replacement of the roof structure. A new elevated system increases ceiling height and introduces a continuous linear skylight that runs the length of the upper floor. This intervention floods the kitchen with natural light and repositions the ceiling as an active architectural surface rather than a limit.
To extend this daylight into the lower level, a large void was carved through the upper slab. This vertical aperture connects both floors visually and atmospherically, allowing light to filter down and strengthening the sense of spatial continuity. What was once a darker, compressed level is now part of a unified, vertically connected environment.
The kitchen itself is expressed with deliberate restraint. A single off-white burnt cement finish wraps walls, floors and ceilings, forming a cohesive and neutral backdrop. Against this muted field, stainless steel kitchen equipment and work surfaces are given prominence, reinforcing the functional identity of the space while contributing a subtle industrial clarity.
Rather than separating professional and social functions, the layout allows them to coexist. The kitchen operates as a fully equipped production space while also accommodating clients, meetings and small events. This duality is central to the project’s intent, positioning culinary work as both performance and gathering.
The result is a space where atmosphere and utility are tightly integrated. Light, structure and material are used to dissolve boundaries, creating a kitchen that operates as a studio and an event setting, reflecting the evolving nature of contemporary culinary practice.
Images by Maíra Acayaba via ArchDaily
In São Paulo’s Pinheiros neighbourhood, Gio Kitchen Atelier transforms a narrow two-storey house into a hybrid culinary environment ...
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