Refettorio OzHarvest
It's a unique place designed to offer our city’s most vulnerable a free nourishing meal made with rescued food. As a pro bono partner, we contributed time and expertise to creating the interiors as well as engaging artists and helping determine the functionality of the flexible space.
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Refettorio OzHarvest
Interiors for social impact
Refettorio OzHarvest Sydney is an Australian-first social impact collaboration between OzHarvest and Massimo Bottura’s not-for-profit organisation Food for Soul. It's a unique place designed to offer our city’s most vulnerable a free nourishing meal made with rescued food. As a pro bono partner, we contributed time and expertise to creating the interiors as well as engaging artists and helping determine the functionality of the flexible space.
A place to feel at home
This project was about creating a welcoming and inclusive community hub for people in need. With no budget and undefined parameters, but with the support of a group of our incredibly generous suppliers and contractors, we transformed a 100-year-old building into a dignified and inviting dining venue.
Donating time and resources
Our objective was to represent OzHarvest’s values in an immersive way through a strong sense of generosity and place, using the colours representative of OzHarvests brand and the Australian landscape. The space needed to feel warm, a place to feel at home, with the aim of becoming a neighbourhood social hub open to anyone in need. A group from our circle of suppliers generously agreed to donate time and resources. By working closely with them we determined what they could supply within our time frame and their budget and used this information to create parameters for our design.
Using art to convey generosity
Our approach was to firstly celebrate the natural features and textures of the building. Removing the render revealed a light terracotta, textured brick that imbued the space with warmth and familiarity. Where possible we re-used, recycled, used local, surplus and seconds items, including seconds crockery pieces from Mud Australia. To convey generosity, we created the motif of the ‘giving’ basket and worked closely with artist Harriet Goodall to create a large, sculptural basket pendant within the multi-story entrance atrium. Local indigenous artist Tegan Murdoch from Ngumpie Weaving produced a series of feature wall lights based on her beautiful, feathered baskets.
Designing for impact
For us, the way people interact within a space ultimately determines if it is successful. Seeing vulnerable people come together to enjoy a nourishing meal in the inviting interiors we designed for the Refettorio demonstrates the impact good design can have on environments and the people who inhabit them.