A multiuse brutalist space
For its new concept, Osmo X Marusan café-terrace in Montréal commissioned local design studio MDT Mobilier to create a hybrid collective space.
MDT Mobilier, a well-known Montreal steel furniture design and production studio, recently unveiled its concept for the new Osmo X Marusan café-terrace, formerly known as Café Osmo. Owners Hideyuki Imaizumi and David Schmidt wanted to change the venue’s vocation and transform the café into a hybrid collective space that serves as a café, bar, boutique, and event space.
The design studio is specialised in steel furniture. It was founded by Mathieu Domingue Trempe. MDT Mobilier’s vision is reflected in each of its creations: simple, durable lines that are finely crafted at its Montreal workshop.
Inspired by the space’s brutalist style and historical details, the team wanted to preserve its unique character, while playing up the style to make it even more iconic. With the direction set, the interior design and furniture were made entirely to order. Long, galvanised-steel communal tables at the centre of the space create the desired unifying tone. Running along the angular walls, a brick bench echoes the exposed foundation of the adjacent bicentennial building. The result is a versatile, sober space that adapts to the multiple dimensions of the company.
The materials—galvanised steel, brick, and polycarbonate—were chosen for their suitability in a streamlined production process involving little manipulation in order to respect both the limited budget and the minimalist spirit inherent to the modernist style. Once assembled, these three materials don't require any finishing or protective layer, allowing them to be used as is.
The reflective quality of galvanised steel, used for most surfaces, tables, counters, and fixtures, brings the space to life throughout the day, and from one season to the next. Over time, this raw, responsive material will change under the surrounding environment, and will develop a patina to give it a slightly more matte look. The chairs, which were custom designed for the space, are finished in a sandstone red powder coat to create a link to the bricks in the foundation and bench.
The existing base of the service counter, which was retained to avoid wasting material, is overlaid with polycarbonate and dimmable LED strips. In order to imbue the semi-basement café with a sense of grandeur, the ambience and furniture were designed to keep the focal point low, leaving the large concrete ceiling, with its three skylights, unobstructed.
The new design of the communal space emphasises the uniqueness of the Osmo X Marusan experience, both through the bespoke furniture, and through the use of raw, adapted materials, which pair harmoniously with the existing architecture.
Pictures by Eliott Légaré