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Finally, the looped footprint of Below represents a rewinding of
the distillation process, from bottle back to source. Elsewhere,
an extensive walk-through wine cellar is a warren waiting to be
discovered.
Beyond Below’s whiskey stave walls lie three private dining rooms,
each a play on the idea of what might lie hidden behind closed doors.
The Broken Room is styled on the ancient Japanese art of Kintsugi, a
practice which involves repairing broken ceramics by bonding breaks
with a golden glue. Guests dine within walls lined with cracked gesso;
fractured pendants hang overhead and a bespoke table made of
polished chestnut forms the centrepiece, its veins and wells now filled
with golden resin.
The Reading Room revolves around a collection of culinary books,
from Michelin guides through to vintage cookbooks. Bespoke
creations by British artist Su Blackwell, famed for her fairy- tale-
focused paper sculptures, fly out of the bookshelf and away up the
chimney, to Above.