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Le Interior Affairs  ·  BYD by 1826 Café, Zhongshan Park, Singapore

A Café Shaped by
Light, Warmth & Rhythm

Le Interior Affairs designs BYD by 1826 Café at Zhongshan Park not as a venue for consumption, but as a social anchor — where adaptive light, limewash walls, and a pet-friendly layout create a space that holds time rather than spending it.

There are cafés that serve coffee, and then there are spaces that hold time. BYD by 1826 Café at Zhongshan Park belongs firmly to the latter. Conceived as more than a hospitality venue, the project unfolds as an experiential interior — one that quietly recalibrates the relationship between brand, place, and community. Designed by Le Interior Affairs, the café sits within the greenery of the park not as an interruption, but as an extension of it. A pause. A gathering point. A place where movement softens and moments stretch.

From the outset, the intention was clear: this would not be a café designed for turnover, but for lingering. For conversations that wander, laptops that stay open, pets that curl beside chairs, and light that changes slowly across surfaces. The design resists spectacle in favour of atmosphere, allowing warmth, tactility, and spatial clarity to take centre stage.

BYD by 1826 Café — main interior establishing shot

BYD by 1826 Café at Zhongshan Park — the interior sits within the park's greenery as an extension of it rather than a departure from it. Limewash walls, warm timber and generous natural light define the atmosphere from the first moment.

Designing for Behaviour, Not for Turnover

The creative process began not with form, but with behaviour. How do people enter, move, sit, and stay? How does comfort manifest not just physically, but emotionally? These questions shaped every decision, from circulation paths to seating density, from material durability to the rhythm of light.

As a pet-friendly café, inclusivity became a guiding principle. The layout is intentionally generous, with clear sightlines and fluid movement that accommodate both human and animal traffic without friction. Seating is arranged to feel relaxed rather than regimented, offering a variety of postures and proximities — whether one arrives alone, in pairs, or with a group. The result is a space that feels intuitive, almost effortless, in the way it supports everyday rituals.

Rather than imposing a singular focal point, the café reveals itself gradually. Views open and close. Volumes expand and compress. There is a quiet choreography at play, encouraging exploration while maintaining a sense of calm.

BYD café — seating area and circulation BYD café — wide view of the social space

The café in use — a layout designed for coexistence rather than control. Seating varieties and generous circulation allow the space to flex between quiet morning solitude and animated afternoon gatherings without friction.

An Atmosphere That Evolves

Perhaps the most distinctive signature of the project is its treatment of light. Natural daylight is welcomed generously through expansive glazing, framing views of Zhongshan Park and drawing the landscape into the interior. This visual connection anchors the café within its context, reinforcing its role as a social extension of the park rather than a sealed destination.

As daylight fades, an adaptive lighting system takes over with subtlety and intention. Tunable white lighting shifts throughout the day, transitioning from crisp and energising to warm and enveloping. The change is almost imperceptible, yet deeply felt — supporting comfort, mood, and circadian rhythm without theatricality. This layered lighting strategy reflects Le Interior Affairs' philosophy: that design should respond, not perform. Light here is not an accessory, but an atmosphere — one that evolves alongside the people who occupy the space.

"Design should respond, not perform. Light here is not an accessory, but an atmosphere."

Le Interior Affairs
BYD café — portrait natural light and limewash wall BYD café — portrait seating zone with warm light

Light as the primary design material — natural light from Zhongshan Park floods the interior during the day, while the adaptive lighting system takes over in the evening, shifting from crisp to warm with the hours.

BYD café — portrait view of seating and architectural detail

The café's interior depth — layers of seating, materiality and light reveal themselves gradually as you move through the space, creating a sense of discovery rather than immediate disclosure.

A Backdrop Designed to Age Gracefully

The material palette is intentionally restrained. Limewash finishes lend walls a soft, tactile depth — their irregularity catching light in a way that feels organic and lived-in. Warm timber elements ground the interior, introducing a sense of familiarity and calm. Together, these materials create a backdrop that is soothing rather than distracting, allowing human activity to remain the true focal point.

Every surface is chosen with longevity in mind. There is nothing overly precious, yet nothing disposable. The interior is designed to age gracefully — to accumulate patina and memory rather than wear. This sense of timelessness aligns with both the café's hospitality function and BYD's forward-looking brand ethos, interpreted here with restraint rather than literal reference.

BYD café — portrait limewash wall detail and seating BYD café — portrait material and light detail

The material palette — limewash walls with their soft, irregular surface catch daylight differently at different hours. Warm timber grounds the space with the familiarity of something that has always been there.

Brand Storytelling Woven Into Architecture

Client collaboration played a crucial role in shaping the final outcome. From the beginning, there was a shared vision of a hybrid space — one that balances openness and refinement while remaining aligned with BYD's identity. Conversations centred on how automotive cues could be woven into the environment without overpowering its warmth or turning the café into a showroom.

Through an iterative process, adjustments were made to zoning, detailing, and spatial emphasis. Brand storytelling is present, but subtle — integrated into the architecture rather than applied as surface decoration. This collaborative spirit allowed the project to evolve beyond initial expectations, resulting in a space that feels cohesive, authentic, and quietly confident.

BYD café — counter or service area BYD café — detail of seating or interior element

The working spaces — counter, service areas and interior elements carry the same warmth and material discipline as the seating zones, ensuring the whole café holds together as a single considered experience.

BYD café — portrait view of the full spatial experience

The café in full — the spatial choreography reveals itself as layers of warmth, light and material quality that work together to make lingering feel not just comfortable, but genuinely inviting.

Fostering Connection Over Consumption

What makes BYD by 1826 Café particularly compelling is the way it gives back to its community. It functions as a social anchor — a place where different rhythms coexist: quiet mornings, animated afternoons, gentle evenings. The pet-friendly layout invites a broader audience, fostering inclusivity and shared experience.

The design does not dictate how the space should be used. Instead, it supports possibility. Work, leisure, conversation, solitude — all are equally accommodated. In doing so, the café becomes less about consumption and more about connection. Good design is not about aesthetics alone, but about experience. Hybrid environments demand a heightened awareness of emotional response, flexibility, and human behaviour. Here, Le Interior Affairs has created a space that feels both contemporary and enduring.

A café that does not rush you. An interior that listens as much as it speaks. A place where design recedes just enough to allow life to take centre stage. And in that restraint, it finds its power.

BYD café — final wide shot showing the complete interior

BYD by 1826 Café — a social anchor for Zhongshan Park, designed not for turnover but for the kind of lingering that allows communities to form, one unhurried afternoon at a time.

Le Interior Affairs BYD by 1826 Café  ·  Zhongshan Park, Singapore
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