Function: Restaurant, Gastro-Bar Location: Sadrovaya-Kudrinskaya Str. 32, Moscow Project: 2018, Total area: 100 m2 Status: Completed
Wine Happens is a gastronomic bar near Patriarch’s Ponds, conceived as a spatial framework for unhurried evenings where food, wine, and conversation unfold at their own pace. The project is rooted in the precise culinary approach of Timur Abuzyarov’s signature kitchen, while the interior sets a restrained yet expressive backdrop for the experience. Located within one of Moscow’s most established dining districts, the restaurant engages with its context quietly — without excess, but with a clear sense of place. The brief called for a complete transformation of an existing space within a very tight timeframe. Rather than relying on decorative gestures, the interior was rethought architecturally. The layout is organized around a dining area and a semi-open kitchen, deliberately brought into close visual contact to emphasize openness, craft, and the shared experience of food.
A defining element of the interior is a wooden architectural shell wrapping the dining space. Made from reclaimed wood sourced from rural structures, it forms a warm inner layer that lowers the visual horizon and reshapes the perception of scale. The wooden skin stops short of the ceiling, framing the windows from within and creating a subtle sense of enclosure, while the concrete floor and ceiling remain exposed above. The boundary between kitchen and dining is articulated through a sequence of tactile elements: an elongated marble bar with brass detailing, a seafood display, and a brass niche that filters views without closing them off. Seating is kept intentionally low and soft — banquettes and comfortable chairs — reinforcing the calm, evening-oriented rhythm of the space. Lighting plays a key role in shaping the restaurant’s character. Custom brass fixtures with varied perforations, reflective metal details, and angled mirrors enhance the glow of the space, amplify reflections, and visually expand the interior. Together with a restrained palette of concrete, wood, brass, and stone, these elements create a warm, focused atmosphere — a space where architecture quietly supports the rituals of dining, wine, and human interaction.