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Could MVRDV's transparent Infinity Kitchen revolutionise restaurant design?
POSTED 01 Jun 2016 . BY Kim Megson
The Infinity Kitchen features completely transparent surfaces, shelves, cupboards, taps and even utensils Credit: Martin Rijpstra
Restaurants of the future could look a lot lighter because of Dutch architects MVRDV’s latest creation: a fully transparent glass kitchen.

The installation, called Infinity Kitchen, was created as part of a satellite event for the Venice Architecture Biennale commissioned by Weng Ling of the Beijing Centre for the Arts (BCA).

The Infinity Kitchen is a proposal for the next stage of kitchen design. It features completely transparent surfaces, shelves, cupboards, taps and even utensils.

The idea is that cuisine will improve if the processes that go on in kitchens are physically transparent, casting a light on food choice, preparation, care, hygiene and waste.

According to MVRDV, the installation takes the typical modern day modular kitchen and moves it forward, “challenging the immense, yet generic, kitchen industry” and celebrating good cooking.

“If we imagine everything is transparent, clear and clean, doesn’t it mean that the only thing that is colourful and visible is our food,” said MVRDV co-founder Winy Maas. “Doesn’t it then imply that we are encouraged to love the food, in that way, and that maybe it even becomes more healthy, if not sexy?

“I see this as part of a wider dream, this kitchen. It is part of an environment, if not a city, that is transparent and therefore accessible. Imagine if not only kitchens were transparent, but the walls through to the neighbour and the next neighbour even. This would create infinite perspectives in our cities.

“It would make within our claustrophobic environments possibly a view, into the direction of the mountains or the sea.”

The exhibition featuring Infinity Kitchen will be open to the public until 30 September 2016 in Università IUAV di Venezia Ca’tron.
The installation, called Infinity Kitchen, was created as part of a satellite event for the Venice Architecture Credit: Martin Rijpstra
The idea is that cuisine will improve if the processes that go on in kitchens is physically transparent, casting a light on food choice, preparation, care, hygiene and waste Credit: Martin Rijpstra
The idea of the design is to challenge the 'immense, yet generic' kitchen industry Credit: Martin Rijpstra
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NEWS
Could MVRDV's transparent Infinity Kitchen revolutionise restaurant design?
POSTED 01 Jun 2016 . BY Kim Megson
The Infinity Kitchen features completely transparent surfaces, shelves, cupboards, taps and even utensils Credit: Martin Rijpstra
Restaurants of the future could look a lot lighter because of Dutch architects MVRDV’s latest creation: a fully transparent glass kitchen.

The installation, called Infinity Kitchen, was created as part of a satellite event for the Venice Architecture Biennale commissioned by Weng Ling of the Beijing Centre for the Arts (BCA).

The Infinity Kitchen is a proposal for the next stage of kitchen design. It features completely transparent surfaces, shelves, cupboards, taps and even utensils.

The idea is that cuisine will improve if the processes that go on in kitchens are physically transparent, casting a light on food choice, preparation, care, hygiene and waste.

According to MVRDV, the installation takes the typical modern day modular kitchen and moves it forward, “challenging the immense, yet generic, kitchen industry” and celebrating good cooking.

“If we imagine everything is transparent, clear and clean, doesn’t it mean that the only thing that is colourful and visible is our food,” said MVRDV co-founder Winy Maas. “Doesn’t it then imply that we are encouraged to love the food, in that way, and that maybe it even becomes more healthy, if not sexy?

“I see this as part of a wider dream, this kitchen. It is part of an environment, if not a city, that is transparent and therefore accessible. Imagine if not only kitchens were transparent, but the walls through to the neighbour and the next neighbour even. This would create infinite perspectives in our cities.

“It would make within our claustrophobic environments possibly a view, into the direction of the mountains or the sea.”

The exhibition featuring Infinity Kitchen will be open to the public until 30 September 2016 in Università IUAV di Venezia Ca’tron.
The installation, called Infinity Kitchen, was created as part of a satellite event for the Venice Architecture Credit: Martin Rijpstra
The idea is that cuisine will improve if the processes that go on in kitchens is physically transparent, casting a light on food choice, preparation, care, hygiene and waste Credit: Martin Rijpstra
The idea of the design is to challenge the 'immense, yet generic' kitchen industry Credit: Martin Rijpstra
RELATED STORIES
MVRDV turn traditional buildings inside out for green-lit Zaanstad Cultural Cluster


MVRDV’s design for a cultural hub in Zaandstad, Holland, featuring a concert hall, cinema, arts space, dance studio, library and architecture centre, has been given the green light by the municipality.
EXCLUSIVE: MVRDV founders speak to CLAD about the importance of leisure architecture


The founding partners of Dutch studio MVRDV have told CLADthat architects and developers must consider including a leisure component when designing new structures in built environments.
MVRDV create towering public staircase to celebrate Rotterdam's reconstruction and revival


Dutch architects MVRDV have announced an eye-catching temporary installation for Rotterdam: a giant staircase leading from the plaza outside the city’s central train station to the top of an adjacent historic building.
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Les Mills calls on the industry to support UNICEF
Global group exercise specialist, Les Mills, is inviting operators to sign up to its Workout for the World event on 20 June, in support of UNICEF.
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Global luxury hospitality brand, Six Senses, has partnered with longevity healthcare provider, HUM2N, to launch a clinic at Six Senses London, at The Whiteley.
KX Chelsea invests £15 million to upgrade its wellness offering
Premium London health club, KX Chelsea, will imminently unveil its most significant redevelopment since its launch in 2002 to create an integrated wellness model combining training, recovery and relaxation.
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