Eye-D designed by Ofist in Istanbul, is not just a shop, but a multi purpose venue... Its a blogger spot, a meeting point, an art gallery, a coffee shop or a music venue... More importantly, it is a human experience based space. A place where you not only shop, but involve in other experiences, being aware of your surrounding and valuing it.

Eye-d is not just designed to be an optical shop. No business is just the business itself anymore. Everything is social. We can not neglect todays facts when even sitting at home by yourself can be a social media product.

Besides, in crowded metropolises like Istanbul, life is busy, fast and hard. Sparing time for everything and everyone is almost impossible. So maybe thats why we are always doing many things at a time; having a morning coffee, while checking mails and news, adding stories to instagram, following friends to catch up with what they are doing, and also keep on doing our work.

We also try to relate ourselves with the environments around us. Lets call this user experience. When we are in an exhibition, a bookstore, or a shopping mall, theres always some kind of experience, but usually, because of the life in these metropolises itself or the scale of these environments, the experience is somehow out of human proportion. It is not easy to relate oneself to, or to develop an affinity.

So, Eye-D is not just a shop, but a multi purpose venue. Its a blogger spot, a meeting point, an art gallery, a coffee shop or a music venue... More importantly, it is a human experience based space. A place where you not only shop, but involve in other experiences, being aware of your surrounding and valuing it.

Then again, as almost everything else around us, the concept of an optical shop has also changed. What used to be very technical, even scientific has now become fashionable. Wearing spectacles or sunglasses used to be a technical need. To fulfill this purpose, shops were designed hygienical, as if designing a health care space. Clean cut. Sterile. Clinical.

Considering that your face is the first/most eye catching part of your body, your glasses have a distinctive role in identifying your character, personalizing your look. So Eye-d suggests "why wear a mass brand, when you can purchase alternative, independent designer glasses!". Creating a Rayban-free shopping space, the design solution that we come up with couldnt be anything like common! It should be an extraordinary, alternative, eye catching, funky, distinctive, never getting outdated yet fashionable space, allowing different experiences each time for its users.

Our approach was to create a cosy, interactive, user friendly environment, appropriate to human scale, in the middle of the chaotic city. It is a space designed to be addapted to different purposes easily, while developing a communication with its user. We think the strongest instrument of achieving this is the extraordinary use of simple and familiar materials/ideas.

Like our usual approach to our designs; we came up with just a few simple, yet very strong design ideas and shaped the whole space within that framework. One of these ideas was to form an iron frame work and panels that create a multi purpose background, allowing easy arrangements for different needs like showcasing glasses as well as art works.

The other idea was to assign a light, familiar, friendly element, something simple in form and size, and generate a space using it all around. We decided on cork yoga blocks and ended up hanging 550 of them in 105m² area, 95 of them with light sources. We also hung a 4m long plywood table laminated cork on both sides, from just four corners to the ceiling. Matching cork Bob stools from Modus are wandering around...
The key in working on a simple, ordinary material or an idea is the details and how you interpret the idea and implement it. Carefully considered details and implemantations with high quality workmanships are our all time indispensables.

2017

2017

Project name: Eye-D
Location: Istanbul / Turkey
Interior Design: Ofist (Yasemin Arpac & Sabahattin Emir)
Current Exhibition: TooLess / Koray Erkaya
Professional Photography: Ali Bekman

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