Some different views of an in building employee snack store. Initial image is 5,000 x 4,000 tga. -David
Some different views of an in building employee snack store. Initial image is 5,000 x 4,000 tga. -David
David - the lego-like people were a nice touch!
That tile pattern does make the place a bit busy. I'm afraid the customer's might get dizzy!
Regards, Ross
<a href=http://www.designstop.com/>DesignStop.Com</a>
jens,
I had to laugh. No offense taken!
A little background would probably help. Office building (circa 1975) with 2,500 to 3,000 people. Store hours 6:30 AM to 3:00 PM. Nearest restaurant - 1\2 mile away. The space was chosen and allocated ( column and all ) by others.
Main objective - provide employees with coffee and beverages during the day, cold deli sandwiches, snacks and take out catering for small lunch meetings. No seating, no hot food, just bare minimums. Loitering is usually frowned upon in these establishments.
The colors weren't my first choice but they do go with the rest of the building. But the materials are as the code requires ( cleanable and grease resistant ).
The pathology look probably has more to do with my lack of rendering and lighting expertise than the real thing will look.
Thanks for the feedback! -David
I'm just curious: do you have a floor plan of that facility? Just the walls, the support columns in the middle would be great.
jens g.r. benthien
designer
http://www.sacalobra.de
----------//--
If you don't know how to dream you'll never be a designer.
----------//--
--------------------//--
We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.
--------------------//--
jens,
We call the center "bench" slat wall. There is hardware that slips into the horizontal grooves to make shelves, basket display, even hanger rods for clothing displays. They are very versatile. A google search for slatwall images:
http://images.google.com/images?q=sl...UTF-8&oe=UTF-8
I do the main work areas, product flow and traffic patterns. I noramlly leave the colors, finishes, and interior stuff to others. ( The ones with the big letters after their names ). I try to give a starting point with the rendering. Either so bad that they will get mad and put forth some extra effort to show me up, or a decent base idea that they can embelish.
You can ask my wife - David has very limited color taste <g>
-David
"looking good", though I agree with the general census here regarding those tiles
[This message was edited by gidgit on December 10, 2003 at 10:34.]
Ross
>> David - the lego-like people were a nice touch! <<
They are my best employees! I find them more acceptable to end users than the quasi real models around or the flat people decals. I have 3 or four different guys. AutoCAD extruded models.
>> That tile pattern does make the place a bit busy. I'm afraid the customer's might get dizzy! <<
I'm trying out new wall tile pattern materials. With the rendering package I have, you must make a mask for the base grid ( 4 x 4 ) and a mask for each color. 6 x 6 or 7 x 7 with 4 color squares would probably work better.
-David
GIF
Some different views of an in building employee snack store. Initial image is 5,000 x 4,000 tga. -David
Ross,
That's 1 reason I normally stick with the equipment part of a project only. I have very little experince or knowledge of public interior finishes other than production areas. That's pretty simple: White walls with white ceilings on red floors <g>
jens,
Atttached dxf and dwg floor plan.
The double doors on the right lead to the main lobby. This will be the customers only entrance. The sigle door ( upper left ) will go to the loading dock and not accessible to the public. gif is 1/8" = 1'-0" scale. dxg and dxf are 1"=1"
-David
Bookmarks