The Campari Office By I-V Design Is The Stuff Dreams Are Made Of

Published by
Sophia Watson
April 28, 2017

The new Campari workplace is a space that draws people together – the mark of any good bar, or office for that matter.

For the opening of its Canadian office (its 24th internationally), Gruppo Campari wanted something ambitious, audacious, even a little celebratory.

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Tucked away on a dead-end street in Toronto’s Liberty Village, a trendy locus for start-ups, tech companies and advertising firms, the office had been a film studio and before that a foundry. At first, it didn’t look like much: it had no windows, no partitions, no ventilation. The space was “a horrible black hole,” as Massimo Mottura, president of Campari Canada, describes it. But that 890-square-metre void allowed innovative local design firm I-V to literally rip it up and start again.

The result? Open concept seating, informal and formal meeting areas, a flexible event space, and a Ping-Pong table – ticking off all the requirements of the modern office experience. It’s collaborative, pragmatic, creative. And with its chill-out zones, cool palette and a five-metre bar, it also feels like a fabulous nightclub of the future. As in any exclusive club, the entranceway is nondescript, and the low-ceilinged reception area could easily double as a coat check. Then you step into a gleaming white space with 12-metre ceilings.

“It’s almost like walking into a cave and discovering something really magical,” says Emil Teleki, founder and designer at I-V. Shelves of wildly coloured liquor bottles glow in the light that streams down from rows of skylights. Ventilation ducts snake through the space like supersize pneumatic tubes. Translucent polycarbonate sheeting screens off the rest of the space, forming an ad hoc VIP zone. Behind the bar, it’s all business.

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The inspiration came from an old Campari ad, created by Italian futurist Fortunato Depero, wherein the figure of a man and his chosen drink are distilled down to pure geometries. “We basically looked at that as the reference point,” says Teleki. “When we started to look at the space planning, we saw that we had this rectangular box, and we actually drew circles, squares and rectangles in the box. It was really as simple as that.”

These flourishes soften the stark minimalism so the overall effect is sprightly, rather than stark. Tellingly, the front bar, which will be used for events, training sessions and tastings, has already become a favourite gathering spot at lunch.

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