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Jean de Lessard designs a warm and eclectic Rasoï – A sumptuous and exuberant India

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Rasoi restaurant by Jean de Lessard

Created by the interior designer Jean de Lessard, the new Indian fusion restaurant Rasoï, located in Saint-Henri, Montréal, is a true heightened sum of sensations.

I wanted to recreate through shapes how I perceived the colours and flavours of the Indian cuisine while I was in London, a few months before I was commissioned to design this peculiar project

– Jean de Lessard

Rasoi restaurant by Jean de Lessard

Photo © Adrien Williams

To genuinely capture the Hindi spirit of the place, Jean de Lessard has combined geometric and organic shapes— the latter which are at the source of the country’s art and culture — and an assembly of new and on-site materials, saturated colours and pastels, contrasting matters such as silky and rough textures and finally an array of styles bringing to mind a European colonial past.

Rasoi restaurant by Jean de Lessard

Photo © Adrien Williams

Now, since the framework of the project is contemporary, the design must keep such a merry eclectic environment focused on clarity and restraint, such as shown by the straight lines and clean surfaces used on the building’s façade.

Intense, but serene Barhat
Conveying the idea of a garbhagriha or a revisited claustra, the perforated yellow structure is the focal architectural element of the project. Positioned in the main circulation axis on the ground floor, the structure has a double function, that of integrating the original wood pillars to the decor and privatizing four contiguous dining areas. Paradoxically, this break-up point succeeds in keeping everything as a whole in a coherent fashion. The same element is also used in the basement as a reminder, in a space which combines a second kitchen, two reception rooms and administrative offices.

Rasoi restaurant by Jean de Lessard

Photo © Adrien Williams

On the ground floor, and actually quite at home in this organized chaos, lies another strong visual element: the back wall, behind the bar, where the kitchen is located. It has been covered with wood panels of various shapes and thickness that have been installed at random to create depth and rhythm; shadows which are formed by the light hitting the edges and the uneven surface add texture to the already intimate ambiance. Further, according to the designer’s conclusions from his studies on shape, the symbiosis of asymmetry + symmetry initiates movement and visual contact elegantly.

Rasoi restaurant by Jean de Lessard

Photo © Adrien Williams

Softness and speckle
Nature plays an important part in the life of the Bharatis whom know how to embellish their everyday life with floral and vegetal motifs. The decoration of the ceiling at Rasoï has its source in the plant world and refers to the ancient art of the henna tattoo. Incidentally, in this project, the chosen chromatic palette is meant to reflect Bollywood in all its splendour.

Rasoi restaurant by Jean de Lessard

Photo © Adrien Williams

Plays with opacity make of this restaurant a living, conniving and warm place. Other than the yellow structure, the vibrant partition made of pink glass sparkles under the lights of the hanging mosaic Jaipuri lamps – these are handmade and come from the city of Jaipur, in Rhajastan, a city that is known as the “Pink City”.

Rasoi restaurant by Jean de Lessard

Photo © Adrien Williams

Indeed, the smallest element of design in the restaurant bears meaning.  “I think that Jean’s design is genial and authentic. It has something special and conveys an exotic je-ne-sais-quoi”, concludes the owner of Rasoï, Rex Patel, who believes that the result perfectly illustrates the spirit of fusion of his establishment which, by the way, is already a must on the Montréal gourmet scene.

Rasoi restaurant by Jean de Lessard

Drawing © Jean de Lessard

Facts:
Client: Indian restaurant Rasoï, Montréal, Canada
Design: Jean de Lessard, creative designers
General contractor: Castle Reno (Paul Cantwell)
Artist: Atelier Isabelle Leclerc
Glass: Chronoglass
Construction end: June 2013
Photography credit: Adrien Williams
Area: 3,200 square feet

*All images and information courtesy to Jean de Lessard, cretive designers.


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