2025
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POPPY Roastery is a coffee bean roastery and retail shop located in the historic merchant district of Shikemichi, Nagoya. Housed in a traditional Japanese wooden building, the project preserves the intimacy of its low-ceilinged architecture, offering a warm and contemplative space that evokes the spirit of Showa-era kissaten culture while presenting it in a new, tactile form. Visitors are asked to remove their shoes—an act that transitions them from the street into a slower, quieter world.
Unlike modern cafés that separate production and retail, POPPY Roastery places the roasting process at the center of the visitor experience. The space is designed not only to sell coffee, but to reveal the unseen: the sound of beans roasting, the scent of transformation, the gestures of a craft often hidden behind the scenes. This challenges the boundaries between shop and workshop, offering a multisensory encounter that digital commerce cannot replicate.
The spatial language is defined by materials that evoke depth and time. Walls and ceiling are finished with a natural paint made from binchōtan—traditional Japanese charcoal—giving the interior a rich, moisture-regulating black that absorbs both sound and light. The main counter is made from carbonized cork imported from Portugal, chosen for its unique texture and symbolic connection to fire. Above, a lightweight aluminum mirror reflects the activity below, amplifying the intimacy of the experience without compromising safety.
Alongside coffee, the shop offers hand-illustrated drip bag gift sets, packaged in painted tin cans produced by a 120-year-old Tokyo factory. The illustrations—depicting menu items from “New Poppy,” the sister café—were drawn by the space’s designer. These have become cultural signatures, sparking a desire among recipients to visit the café in person, transforming a small product into a cultural invitation.
POPPY Roastery is not a trend-driven space. It is a quiet manifesto for analog culture, local memory, and the slow pleasures of craft. Through its materials, rituals, and hand-drawn stories, it offers visitors something rare: not just coffee, but continuity.
Credits
Entrant Company
MUNO DESIGN
Category
Interior Design - Flagship Store
Entrant Company
HP Inc.
Category
Product Design - Computer & Information Technology