Creating connection through the senses

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Texture, soft light and warm tones provide a calming welcome point. A discreet retail unit and water station feature in the reception area.

Texture, soft light and warm tones provide a calming welcome point. A discreet retail unit and water station feature in the reception area. Image: Sam Hartnett

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Clay-rendered walls, soft light and warm tones provide a calming welcome point.

Clay-rendered walls, soft light and warm tones provide a calming welcome point. Image: Sam Hartnett

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A natural palette, paired with rich and varied textures, complements and enhances the existing raw shell of the building.

A natural palette, paired with rich and varied textures, complements and enhances the existing raw shell of the building. Image: Sam Hartnett

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A tactile, clay-rendered wall leads visitors from reception through to the studio spaces beyond.

A tactile, clay-rendered wall leads visitors from reception through to the studio spaces beyond. Image: Sam Hartnett

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Space-saving features, such as locating an additional four freestanding grooming stations in a confined dressing room, ensure the areas worked efficiently.

Space-saving features, such as locating an additional four freestanding grooming stations in a confined dressing room, ensure the areas worked efficiently. Image: Sam Hartnett

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A tactile, clay-rendered wall leads visitors from reception through to the studio spaces beyond.

A tactile, clay-rendered wall leads visitors from reception through to the studio spaces beyond. Image: Sam Hartnett

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Warm lighting on the stair entices visitors from the street.

Warm lighting on the stair entices visitors from the street. Image: Sam Hartnett

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The focus of the space was on how visitors should feel when connecting with it. The deisgners focused on delivering a sensory connection through the five senses.

The focus of the space was on how visitors should feel when connecting with it. The deisgners focused on delivering a sensory connection through the five senses. Image: Sam Hartnett

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The studio provides infrared saunas, bespoke float pods and pro-athlete grade massage devices as well as yoga and meditation spaces. Planning and finishes throughout ensured functionality was retained while still providing a sense of calm and accessibility.

The studio provides infrared saunas, bespoke float pods and pro-athlete grade massage devices as well as yoga and meditation spaces. Planning and finishes throughout ensured functionality was retained while still providing a sense of calm and accessibility. Image: Sam Hartnett

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An insertion into an industrial section of the city, this new wellness retreat model provides a range of calming spaces for the rejuvenation of both mind and body.

Located in one of six Christchurch buildings that have been stitched together to form health and wellbeing precinct The Welder, wellness retreat O-Studio was judged this year’s Healthcare and Wellness award-winner at the Interior Awards.

A collaborative effort between architects Three Sixty Architecture, designers Establish Studio, branding agency Attraction Studio and client Tim Bateman, the project impressed judges with “its range of calming spaces for the rejuvenation of both mind and body”.

Tasked with transforming an industrial space into “a haven of peace and tranquility”, the design team was mindful that they wanted to retain some of the building’s existing fabric. The former mechanic’s workshop was layered with texture, light and voids, which captured a sense of the history of the earthquake-damaged building.

Clay-rendered walls, soft light and warm tones provide a calming welcome point. Image:  Sam Hartnett

Together, the team worked to a holistic brief developed by Attraction Studio, inspired by Te Orokohanga o te Ao, the Māori creation story. “Our client wanted to create a place for transformational growth,” explains Jessica McKenzie of Establish Studio, “so its spaces, while at once being grounding and calm, also needed to engender feelings of determination, strength and resilience.”

To achieve this, says McKenzie, design decisions were made from an anthropological standpoint, putting the human experience at the forefront of the design. The overall aesthetic, she explains, was based on delivering a sensory connection through the five senses.

Warm lighting on the stair entices visitors from the street.  Image:  Sam Hartnett

“The journey from the street to the first-floor tenancy needed to be visually intriguing, to captivate our visitors,” says McKenzie. “On arrival, to invoke the sense of smell, we developed a unique oil blend for the welcome space and we selected a special blend of tea to add to the experience, along with a curated music selection.”

With our senses top of mind, materials and finishes were chosen based on how they felt to the hand or underfoot. Surfaces include clay rendered walls, timber floors and joinery, handmade terracotta tiles and lime-washed walls, “all-natural materials with a tactile, crafted quality that invokes a sense of excitement while remaining calm and grounding,” says McKenzie.

A natural, tonal palette, paired with rich, varied textures creates a warm, organic environment that both complements and enhances the existing raw shell of the building.

Within the studio are three distinct functional spaces: the yoga and meditation studio, communal and circulation spaces and cleansing and bathroom areas. McKenzie points out that the colour palette was crucial to setting the intended mood of each space and was done so in alignment with Te Orokohanga o te Ao and brand ethos. The inclusion of bilingual signage throughout marks a thoughtful engagement with tikanga Māori.

In addition to yoga and meditation spaces, the O-Studio offering includes infrared saunas, bespoke float pods and pro-athlete-grade massage devices. “By taking care in the planning and finishing to locate these things out of sight, this allowed the space to feel calm and welcoming, but still fully functional,” says McKenzie.

Space-saving features, such as locating an additional four freestanding grooming stations in a confined dressing room, ensure the areas worked efficiently. Image:  Sam Hartnett

O-Studio fits a large amount of amenity into a relatively small area, at 300 square metres. The budget of less than $2k per square metre, including all equipment, led to a constant process of refinement, and space-saving features, such as freestanding grooming stations in relatively confined dressing rooms, ensure all areas work efficiently. Some of the studio’s larger group yoga sessions are held in open spaces within The Welder downstairs.

Christchurch’s O-Studio has received great community support and has won a number of awards since opening in addition to its Interior Award. Owner Tim Bateman plans to open further studios, using the same successful design language, and is currently looking at opportunities in the wider Canterbury area and further afield, in the North Island.

Project team

Establish Studio – Jessica McKenzie
Attraction Studio – Tania McCoy, Bianca Punt and Ardo Sitompul
Three Sixty Architecture – Tom Norman, Daniella Pizey (interior) and Dean Cowell (project)

O-Studio was named the winner in the Healthcare and Wellness category at the 2021 Interior Awards. 


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