In this project, we redesigned guest rooms for Dotonbori Hotel, located in the heart of Osaka's Minami district.
The hotel wanted to renovate single rooms, turning them into twin rooms to reflect changes in demand.
Dotonbori Hotel specializes in accommodating overseas guests, so we wanted the rooms to have a Japanese feel, which is why we chose as our room concept "a tea room on a moonlit night." We selected three single rooms and converted them into two twin rooms.
Opening vertical "tsukimi shoji" (moon-viewing paper screens) and looking out onto a forest of bamboo
Moonlight reflects off a lake
We captured beautiful scenes from Japan in the contrasts of our room designs.
]]>ギャラリーレアなんば店の竣工写真をご紹介いたしますhttp://blog.process5.com/?eid=9333082024-03-01T10:24:00+09:002024-03-01T01:25:22Z2024-03-01T01:24:00Z今年1月にオープンなさいましたブランド品買取のお店「ギャラリーレアなんば店」の竣工写真をご紹介いたします。
沢山の人が行き来する御堂筋沿いにありますので、前を通られた方は是非一見くださいませ。
そしてご使用になられていないブランド品や貴金属などございま...PROCESS5 DESIGNPROCESS5最新情報
沢山の人が行き来する御堂筋沿いにありますので、前を通られた方は是非一見くださいませ。
そしてご使用になられていないブランド品や貴金属などございましたら一度ご相談されてくださいませ。
Project to open a storefront along Midosuji lined with brand stores that buy brand-name goods.
We implemented the project with the aim of strengthening the image of the purchasing stores and creating a place that resonates with the sensibilities of the target group of owners of high-value brand-name goods.
Believing that if people feel that selling something means connecting it to someone else, the time they spend selling will be even more pleasant, we connected the store sign, salon entrance and waiting benches with the brand colors to express the idea of connecting customers’ thoughts and feelings through the experience.
Thinking that the experience of selling brand-name goods would be an important experience if the feeling of elation when buying brand-name goods could be experienced when selling them, we created a storefront with repetitive motifs and furnishings like a store brand that convey the history and high quality of the brand, creating an experience of selling as well as buying.
By creating a store brand that connects brand-name goods with the thoughts of the customers who own them, we aimed to create a place where customers who love to buy brand-name goods would also love to sell them.]]>THE BRIDGE HOTEL 客室リニューアルの竣工写真をご紹介いたしますhttp://blog.process5.com/?eid=9333072024-02-27T11:51:58+09:002024-02-27T02:51:58Z2024-02-27T02:51:58Z今月初旬に客室リニューアルが完了しました大阪市西心斎橋のアメリカ村内にあるTHE BRIDGE HOTEL様の竣工写真をご紹介いたします。
弊社HPには他のお写真も掲載しておりますのでぜひご覧くださいませ。
可愛らしくPOPな客室になりました。
THE BRIDGE HOTE...PROCESS5 DESIGNPROCESS5最新情報
弊社HPには他のお写真も掲載しておりますのでぜひご覧くださいませ。
可愛らしくPOPな客室になりました。
"Reflecting Local Features in a Distinctly Japanese Space"
In this guest room redesign project, we created new room designs for The Bridge Hotel, located in America-mura, part of Osaka's Shinsaibashi district.
The hotel wanted to redesign both single and twin rooms to accommodate large numbers of guests.
The Bridge Hotel specializes in accommodating overseas guests, and the hotel's overall theme is Japan itself.
The moment you step out of the hotel, you find yourself in a melting pot of cultures, a distinctly Osaka-like milieu.
We developed a design concept that combined a Japanese feel with the atmosphere of Osaka's America-mura, where the hotel is located. We selected three guest rooms and turned them into four-person rooms.
A Japanese motif employing arches and paper screens
A varied range of bright, vibrant colors
Cute materials evocative of "ame-chan" (in Osaka, hard candies, known elsewhere in Japan as ame, have long been known as "ame-chan.")
Through our use of casual, colorful elements within a Japanese design motif, we have tried to create rooms with a Japanese feel that reflect the local character of Osaka.
]]>道頓堀ホテルサービスカウンターとWCリニューアルの竣工写真のご紹介http://blog.process5.com/?eid=9333062024-02-22T13:51:53+09:002024-02-22T04:51:53Z2024-02-22T04:51:53Z道頓堀ホテル様とのプロジェクト
WCリニューアルとサービスカウンターの竣工写真をご紹介いたします。
WCリニューアルは昨年夏にお手伝いをいただき、サービスカウンターと一緒に写真撮影にご協力いただきました。
フロント横に設置しましたサービスカウンター
...PROCESS5 DESIGNPROCESS5最新情報
WCリニューアルとサービスカウンターの竣工写真をご紹介いたします。
“Carrying on the Factory Structure of the Past and Creating New Value”
Custom product manufacturer and e-commerce site planner, developer, and operator LESTAS.INC called on us to handle their marketing office and fabrication plant project.
This was the third project we did for them, following their head office and Umeda West projects.
The planned project site, in an area with numerous factories, was within line of site of Umeda WEST, enabling the two sites to coordinate with each other.
The building used for the project was a three-story high steel-frame building that had originally been a printing plant. The first floor of the redesigned plant would be a production plant, the second floor would house the marketing office, and the third floor would be a relaxation and socializing space for employees, including a rooftop area.
Because the existing building was originally a factory, there were exposed truss girders, steal H beams, and deck slabs.
We created a design plan that leveraged the rugged, distinctive factory ambiance, smartly combining the functions of the new production plant and marketing office.
This is because we believed we could express the originality of LESTAS.INC’s marketing office and production plant by retaining the raw factory structure and leveraging it in a design that would embody the modern face of production plants and offices.
Employees spend their days quietly, absorbed in their production work.
The president of LESTAS wanted to create a factory workplace environment that was comfortable and stylish.
That’s why we planned a “LESTAS CAFÉ” with its own kitchen for the third floor. The area around the project site contains numerous factories and few places to eat, but LESTAS CAFÉ would provide them with a convenient place to enjoy lunch. It also would serve as a site for periodic social gatherings for the entire company.
The terrace is surrounded by greenery, so when the weather is good employees can dine outside or simply relax and refresh themselves.
The face of the building retains the same factory construction as the buildings around it.
However, take one step inside and you find yourself in a modern, efficient production site and office that looks smart while retaining the rugged look of the factory.
At this site, LESTAS.INC combines analog product manufacturing using traditional hand-working techniques with a marketing office whose state-of-the-art functions make it easy for customers to order custom-made products, which would be difficult and time-consuming to handle on their own. In this project, we were inspired by the client to discover new ideas for creating a unique workplace environment and adding new value to an existing factory building.]]>道頓堀ホテル客室リニューアルの竣工写真撮影を行いましたhttp://blog.process5.com/?eid=9333042024-02-06T18:02:08+09:002024-02-06T09:02:08Z2024-02-06T09:02:08Zこちらもホテル様側にご協力をいただき本日竣工写真撮影を行いました。
道頓堀ホテル様のプロジェクトでは1Fのサービスカウンター もデザインさせていただきましたのでそちらも撮影に協力をいただきました。
見た目もですがお客様とスタッフの皆様にとっての...PROCESS5 DESIGNPROCESS5最新情報
We handled this project for a station-front lodging facility in Otake City, on the Hiroshima side of the border between Hiroshima and Yamaguchi Prefectures.
The main target of the facility is people on business trips to the nearby industrial area. The construction budget was limited, given the per-night lodging price of 7,000 yen, but we were confident that we could leverage the existing design within the budget and operation constraints.
We decided to add a unique spin to its uniform business hotel style by adding distinctive local and regional flavor, employing ideas that would drive interaction between the facility and its community.
For the lobby counter, we used raw steel material and corrugated slate, reflecting the ruggedness of the industrial region. We integrated it with the bar counter, making it possible for guests, after finishing off their front desk procedures, to unwind with a drink at the end of their work day. It also created a space for engaging with customers, making up for the loss of engagement resulting from the use of automated reception terminals. We placed chairs and benches around the lobby. We made it a place where people would come and go, having a bite to eat for breakfast, enjoying a refreshment after soaking in a tub, chatting in the afternoon. In the large communal bath, we used inexpensive 10 cm x 10 cm tiles to create a carp mural, evoking carp streamers made from handmade Otake paper and "Carp Castle," another name for Hiroshima castle. We named this bath the "Shoriyu," meaning "Ascending Carp Bath," creating an auspicious public bath that would also be used by the people of the community. On the wooden wall behind the front desk counter, we used spray paint, in the brand's color, to depict the sun setting behind Mt. Mikura, a famous Mt. Otake hiking destination. Overlapping circular wooden panels were installed on the entrance doors to represent carp scales. Throughout our design, we used distinctive regional elements such as these and others.
We didn't seek to create the luxurious socializing space of an urban boutique hotel, but instead a nostalgic socializing space that's the perfect fit for a business hotel in an outlying area.