A chunky, wedge-shaped island crafted from plaster and beeswax anchors the sparse interior of this pop-up library, shop and exhibition space that design studio Pattern has created in Canberra.
The temporary library is situated in the trendy suburb of Braddon and belongs to new Australian wellness brand Adytum, which produces eco-conscious self-care products such as teas, face oils and bath soaks.
Although the brand is set to open the doors to its first spa in 2021, it was keen to conceive a slightly different style of wellness space that instead celebrates books and the "intellectual nourishment one receives from the written word".
Sydney-based studio Pattern – which is also developing the interiors of Adytum's spa – was asked to design the library. The brand's key request was that the pop-up had minimal environmental impact.
With this in mind, Pattern ditched the idea of overhauling the entire retail unit and instead created just one striking element – a huge wedge-shaped island that sits at the centre of the floor plan, built around two existing structural columns.
"While we didn't have a tenancy of cathedral-like proportions to work with, we drew inspiration from the concepts of purity, simplicity, and clarity often found in religious architectural spaces," Pattern's co-founder, Lily Goodwin, told Dezeen.
The island, which gradually tapers off to a narrow point, has a reclaimed MDF frame that's been covered with natural plaster and finished with a coating of beeswax.
An array of design, architecture and art titles are displayed across the surface, which can be purchased by visitors or borrowed via Adytum's membership scheme. The books are softly illuminated by a couple of white table lamps by Danish brand Hay which have been dotted across the island.
There is also a handful of Adytum's products, including incense sticks that will be burnt throughout the day.
The outer periphery of Adytum Library is used to display works from Australian artists Traianos Pakioufakis and Alana Wilson.
Pakioufakis's expansive photographic prints are draped across bent copper pipes that were found in construction site waste, while Wilson's collection of ceramic vessels – which have been darkened with metal-oxide glazes – perch on rough plinths that the studio salvaged from a local stonemason.
Pattern was established in 2016 by Lily Goodwin and Josh Cain. Previous projects by the studio include Locura, a cocktail and small-plates bar in Byron Bay that's meant to evoke the "raw beauty" of late-night eateries in Mexico.
It also created rose-tinted interiors for The Daily Edited, an accessories shop in Melbourne.
Photography is by Traianos Pakioufakis.