The World of Hospitality Issue 34 2019 | Page 52

52 the World Of Hospitality the large-scale 5m x 2m map of Blagdon tells the story of the company, at the same time as adding a bit of extra theatre to the space.’ The left-hand side of the ground floor space features a natural colourway with a slightly 70s retro feel, including a deep olive green used for the left-side booth banquette seating. Loose seating is in the form of retro moulded chairs for a home-from-home feel, whilst bespoke tables are topped in Brazilian cosmic black granite, with a single, central tulip-style metal base. Brand stories also feature in this area, including a picture wall along the first third of the space, featuring a variety of images from the Yeo Valley HQ. The central section of the wall, alongside the booth seating, features exposed brickwork, which is used again to the left side of the rear wall as Yeo Valley Cafe both a rustic reference and an allusion to the Blagdon company HQ building. a feeling of added depth and an illusory sense of space beyond. A lighting feature made up of a clutch of 19 pendant lamps in different designs and set at different lengths, with shades in yellows, golds and orangey-reds, hangs over the booth seating and catches guests’ eyes as they enter. The final third of the left-side wall houses a cottage-garden-inspired mural by artist Natasha Clutterbuck. The right-hand, ‘cool’ side of the space features a product chiller wall and then an angled counter, both featuring blue-tinged LED underlighting. The counter has a solid stone, delicatessen-style top and plenty of back-wall interest in the form of mustard- coloured tiling in an angled herringbone pattern. As customers arrive at the pay- counter, a large, glossy, petrol-blue dresser, bespoke-designed by Phoenix Wharf, catches the eye against the backwall. The dresser features a granite worktop that matches the table tops, plus an inset sink, and is used both for drink and glasses storage and for Yeo Valley merchandise display - branded cups and aprons, for example. At the top, a cut-out The rear wall features a large-scale retro-style TV against the exposed brickwork, telling the ‘Yeo TV’ brand story visually (without sound) and offering a distraction for anyone queueing to pay at the back-right pay counter. The remaining rear wall is made up a crittal-effect door and screen with lightbox windows to give