Nominee for the Annual Award of the Estonian Association of Interior Architects 2025
Interior architecture
Tarmo Piirmets (Pink)
AOR Architects
Architecture
AOR Architects
Construction
Rakennuttajapalvelu Laihi
Custom furniture
Nord Interactives
Commissioned by
Siigur Restaurant Collection
Completed
2025
Location
Tervasaarenkannas 3, Helsinki
Photos
Silvia Ingrid Kukk

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Helsinki’s Tervasaari island was for centuries associated with tar and its storage. Both Finland and Tervasaari were the centre of the international tar trade. When industrial production declined, the two-storey log storehouse was left without a use. Now it has been repurposed for the restaurant TAR, reviving the significance of the historical locale, tying the old building with contemporary details and connecting Tervasaari with the city centre.

The architectural part of the renovation project was by AOR Architects and the interior architecture was designed by Tarmo Piirmets in collaboration with AOR. Three building volumes, each with their own personality, were knit into a single whole in the course of the project. The historical storehouse, a modest kitchen block and an outward-oriented restaurant pavilion with a clearly recognizable form were restored. All of the volumes are compact in scale and adhere to the restrictions imposed by the location itself and history of the island. The result is a building that does not dominate but melds into the coastal milieu.

The interior architecture for the restaurant stems from the tarry and smoky history of the island. Dark surfaces, deep timber tones and shadowed textures are reminiscent of heated wood and tar that once coated the structures of the building. A contrast is struck by warm patches of light and reddish accent tones that give the interior a human softness. The combination adds up to an intimate, modern and clearly Nordic atmosphere.

The pavilion’s high glass surfaces afford views of the sea and surrounding city, but the interior remains calm and introspective thanks to the dark materials. The renovated log storehouse tells its history honestly: logs, traces of historical layers and restored details bring a clear comprehensible historical dimension supported by the new volumes. The addition of the kitchen block is functional but discreet, not interfering with the spatial rhythm. The environment in the restaurant thus remains in balance – aesthetically refined but not overdoing things, connected to its roots but clearly modern.

TAR isn’t just a place to eat on an island. It’s a space that connects the island’s history with modern design idiom, shaping it into a quiet but pleasant escapist atmosphere – a restaurant that allows visitors to feel that they are amidst historical layers yet in a fresh Nordic-style interior.