An exterior photograph depicting a restaurant in a small building surrounded by trees
COURTESY WONHO LEE

Kellie Patry Takes a Considered Approach to Hospitality Design

Her designs for independent restaurants and coffee shops across Los Angeles feel both natural and expressive.

“It’s a small, very delicate engine that needs to be well considered,” says architectural designer Kellie Patry while pointing to various details at Equator Coffees in Culver City, her most recent hospitality project. “It’s all about understanding how things actually work.”

A black and white portrait of Kellie Patry
Collaborating with small restaurants and cafés, Patry focuses on the potential of people—from local artists to curious customers—to activate spaces.

The Los Angeles designer, who grew up in multiple countries (her father was stationed in the military) and studied at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena, CA, has forged a career outside the world of large firms. The decade she spent working as a consultant for Gensler on Las Vegas’s CityCenter megadevelopment (now called the ARIA Campus) had its value: “Vegas will take risks on things no one else will, so it gives you an opportunity to play,” she notes. But the period also taught Patry that she is best served working on her own with like-minded clients, which she has been doing since launching her studio in 2013. 

A photograph of the interior of a restaurant dominated by a central table made of interlocking plywood sections
Short-lived restaurant Kensho (top) was located inside a former stable on the hilltop property of Yamashiro Hollywood. Its colorful sea-themed mural was created by artist Thomas Williams. A minimal palette dominated by blonde wood furnishings had a lively, modern, handmade feel. COURTESY WONHO LEE

Collaborating with independent restaurants and cafés taps into her mission to design venues that take on dynamic lives of their own, rather than forming “an aesthetic bubble.” She adds: “It’s about how people activate and interact in the space. It’s about creating an opportunity for community in that way.” An optimal experience begins with her understanding the ergonomics of espresso machines, for example. “You cannot design a hospitality space if you don’t understand the physical realities. It doesn’t feel natural,” she says.

A photograph of the interior of a coffee shop with red and blue accents
Located near a stop on L.A.’s Expo Line light rail, Equator Coffees Culver City’s soft curves, blue hues, and gradient tile mix retro futurism with a nod to the nearby coast. COURTESY FRED LICHT

At Equator Coffees Culver City, she dubbed the underlying design concept “Espresso Futurism,” thanks to the café’s proximity and visual connection to a nearby Metro Expo Line light-rail station. Curved lines evoke movement and nod to streamline and Art Deco transportation aesthetics. A Clé tile mural installation by L.A.-based artist Thomas Williams represents the mathematical formula of a wave in blue and gray hues, summoning the California coastline. Incorporating site-specific art makes an interior “more joyful to me and more soulful,” Patry adds. Inside the space all materials and features are custom, from the wooden bench designs inspired by Piccadilly benches she saw in London to the powder-coated steel outdoor tables fabricated with female welders in L.A. The only recognizable elements are the PH5 pendants designed by Poul Henningsen for Louis Poulsen, of which Patry selected a rosy shade to complement Equator’s signature red. 

A photograph of the interior of a coffee shop with a tile bar and wooden built-in shelving
At Blacktop Coffee in L.A.’s Arts District, Patry inserted artful wood joinery, mosaic tile, and pops of color into a raw industrial envelope. COURTESY ELIZABETH DANIELS

Places such as the Normandie Club at the historic Hotel Normandie in L.A.’s Koreatown become woven into their neighborhood fabric. Here, adding new layers such as deep leather banquettes, wood paneling, and painted brick walls makes the establishment feel lovingly timeworn. The quietly minimalist (yet playfully modern) Japanese restaurant Kensho, which occupied a pavilion situated within the historic Hollywood Yamashiro restaurant property during the pandemic (and therefore had a brief run), was a particularly personal project for Patry, who was born in Japan. “That was inspired by Noguchi,” she reflects. “From a design perspective it was a glorious moment.” 

Such choices are “subtle and not meant to be overwhelming or in-your-face,” she says. “But I do want things to feel like they were made for people. It’s what I’m interested in.” 

A photograph of a mural in a coffee shop. the mural features an octopus
COURTESY WONHO LEE
A photograph of seating in a coffee shop
COURTESY FRED LICHT

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