Par Bar 3

The Central Problem

Osokorky is a residential district built largely on former meadows. YODEZEEN's response, led by Artem Zverev, was to bring natural material and craft into an environment that had neither. Every wood element was specified to read as genuinely aged rather than factory-finished. That required Bricble to work from studio sketches using character-grade reclaimed oak across structural, furniture, and decorative applications simultaneously, with consistent natural oil finishing across all of them, so the room would read as one coherent material rather than a collection of pieces.

Reception Desk

Entry foyer: circular reception desk with timber stave upper screen backlit from within, polished concrete floor arc, full-height oak wall cladding beyond

The entry desk is the most coordinated single object in the project. Its form is a cylinder built in three distinct layers: a polished microcement base carrying the laser-cut brand signage, a shadow-gap transition, a reclaimed oak slab counter, and an open vertical stave screen rising above. The stave screen is held in cylindrical form by concealed steel rings at top and base. A scored arc in the concrete screed floor follows the desk's radius, extending the geometry into the floor plane and coordinating the joinery installation with the concrete finishing trade.

Material System

Reclaimed character oak with visible knots and saw marks was fabricated into six distinct applications: structural beam-and-column portal frames, full-height wall cladding panels, the reception counter slab, the stave screen, back-bar shelving, and dining table tops. A natural oil finish was applied consistently across all applications. Artem Zverev described the intent as "a tribute to craftsmanship and natural materials" that would age well rather than hold static.

Back-bar: full-height reclaimed oak shelving grid with varied cubby dimensions, integrated LED strip backlighting behind each shelf row

The back-bar shelving spans approximately 4 m wide and 3 m high with non-uniform cubby sizes, requiring layout optimization that a standard equal-bay system would not need. LED strip lighting was integrated within each shelf row, with the strip positioned and the shelf edges detailed to remove the LED source from direct view.

Main dining banquette zone: repeating arched black steel pendant arms over leather banquette, rectangular solid oak table tops on pumice-aggregate pedestal bases, reclaimed oak portal frame in foreground

Conservatory Canopy

The conservatory volume is covered by a barrel-vault canopy fabricated from CNC-perforated timber panels mounted on black powder-coated steel arch ribs. The canopy spans approximately 15 m in length. Perforation diameter and spacing were held consistent across all panels to maintain the shadow-casting behavior the design relied on: dappled light shifts across tables and floor through the day as sun angle changes. The panels are butt-jointed without visible reveal, so the canopy reads as a continuous perforated surface rather than individual sheets.

Conservatory long view: full extent of perforated timber barrel vault on black steel arch ribs, dappled shadow pattern on floor and banquette tables, live planting along glazed perimeter wall

Steel Grid as Project System

A black powder-coated steel rod grid module was fabricated and deployed across five spatial zones: as a dining room room-divider, as a ceiling trellis in the conservatory, as a bathroom corridor wall surface, as the bathroom vanity backdrop, and at the bar ceiling. In each case it performs a different role, as plant support, spatial partition, lighting artwork surface, or acoustic layer. Using one fabricated module in multiple contexts reduced coordination variables while maintaining visual continuity across the 491 m².

Bathroom vanity: dark-veined Bidasar Green stone basins on open black steel frames, pill-shaped mirrors with sinuous LED flex surround, steel rod grid trellis with climbing pothos

Bidasar Green Stone

Bidasar Green natural stone was specified for the bar counters, the central communal table top, and the bathroom washbasins. The bathroom basin forms are full-slab fabrications carried on open black steel frames without a cabinet base. The stone-to-frame interface requires precise fabrication: the steel must support the slab weight while remaining visually minimal, and the connection point has no tolerance for imprecision.

Private dining room: large round table with internally illuminated translucent top on concrete pedestal, upholstered armchairs in taupe woven fabric, floor-to-ceiling navy velvet drapes

Par Bar³ opened in September 2020 and has maintained operation since, drawing consistent recognition as one of Kyiv's leading hospitality destinations. The Bricble fabrication and installation scope was completed in June 2021 across the full furniture and interior detail package, coordinated with YODEZEEN's construction sequence from sketch through site delivery.