Well, well, friends at long, last we have a new post, and our first of 2013.
Featured in this post, is The Pearl, a new Cameron Mitchell restaurant in Columbus’ Short North Arts District. TORK worked with a local design firm to make Cameron’s vision a reality. The Pearl is a restaurant, tavern, and oyster bar, focusing on made-from-scratch food.
The metal work that TORK fabricated, consisted of door frames, a butcher block table base, bakers rack, restroom implements (shelves, toilet tissue holders, mirror frames, etc.), a “green house”, faux windows, dining table bases, and liquor cabinet doors. Lots of metal, and if we mill it over long enough, our bodies may just have a retroactive hernia thinking about all of the metal we had to sling by hand. Good times. Enjoy the images we have below.
- Liquor cabinet: Steel frame and glass stop w/rivets.
- Booth backer separating the bar from patrons: Steel w/glass
- Door frame: Steel w/rivets
- Butcher Block Base: Steel pipe components w/casters.
- Shelf cap covering the front of storage cubicles in kitchen: Steel w/rivets
- Doorway: Steel w/rivets
- Baker’s rack: Steel w/rivets
- Faux windows used as lighting: steel frame
- Faux windows used as lighting: Steel
- Steel door frame and shelf end-cap w/rivets.
- Detail of “Greenhouse”: Steel and glass
- Steel and glass architecture that covers the stairs to the basement.
- Restroom (Mirror frame, handicap rails, shelves, toilet tissue holder, table base): Steel frames and pipe components.
- Dining table: Steel w/rivets
Thanks for stopping by, The TORK Crew