SHARES

The two-floor cafe, which also hosts a running club for locals, includes showers and lockers, as well as a vegetable garden that grows ingredients required for the dishes on the menu.
 
 
A social security office previously occupied the site of Run Run Run, but its fit-out was completely stripped back to leave behind just a handful of concrete columns.
 
The practice worked around these columns to erect an internal greenhouse-like structure, composed of mint-green steel beams and sheets of plastic.
 
 
Spherical glass orbs planted with soil and vegetables have been suspended in the narrow void between the greenhouse and the facade of the building, allowing passerby on the street to get an up-close glimpse of the produce being grown, there's also a red neon sign denoting the cafe's name.
 
 
Organic cellulose was used to create a grainy surface texture across the ceiling, which has been painted pink. Wood and pale, veiny marble have then been spliced together to form a patchwork floor.
 
 
 
Bright orange dining tables have been dotted. Some of them back onto bubblegum-pink seating booths with scalloped edges, while others are surrounded by bespoke chairs that the practice designed itself.
 
 
One model has a vermillion-red metal frame, with a criss-cross base and meshed circular backrest.
 
The other style of chair has a more blocky form and is composed of sea-green bricks made from wax and pine tree resin.
 
The practice's bold palette continues down on the lower-ground floor. Here there's a casual meeting area anchored by a long brass and marble table, illuminated by an exposed-bulb lamp that dangles above.
 
Behind are the showers, only separated by a pane of glass. If users dare to get bare, they can leave their belongings in the round silver-metal lockers that extend from the wall.