asymmetrical volumes shape café by KQI Architect in vietnam
On a prominent corner lot along one of the busiest streets of Bà Rịa Ward, Ho Chi Minh City, KQI Architect completes The 1999’s Coffee, a 210-square-meter café led by architect Kiến Quân. The project is conceived as an architectural gesture that mediates between the speed of the city and the slower rhythms of everyday pause.
Taking advantage of its corner condition, the design opens toward multiple directions, allowing the café to receive natural light throughout the day. A long, westward-extending sloped roof acts as a continuous sun-shading device, shaping the silhouette of the building while protecting interior spaces from harsh afternoon exposure. Beneath this roof, interlocking asymmetrical volumes establish a dynamic composition, avoiding a single frontal orientation and instead encouraging movement around and through the structure. The roofline is clad in small metal sheets of varied colors, shapes, and sizes, layered like fish scales to create a textured surface that shifts subtly with changing light conditions.
all images by Minq Bui
1999’s Coffee explores material warmth through stone and brick
The Vietnamese team at KQI Architect combines stone, baked brick, woven reed panels, natural wood, and rammed-earth textures, choosing finishes that preserve their raw and tactile qualities and introduce a sense of familiarity and craft. The palette emphasizes sensory experience, roughness, warmth, and weight, reinforcing the café’s role as a place of physical and perceptual slowing down.
This material language continues inside 1999’s Coffee with a restrained palette of neutral tones, soft yellows, and natural wood finishes. Large windows draw daylight deep into the compact interior, extending the space outward visually while maintaining a sense of enclosure. The interiors avoid strong contrasts or decorative gestures, instead relying on light, proportion, and texture to shape atmosphere.
Through its open geometry, tactile materials, and controlled light, the project proposes architecture as a way to gently recalibrate it, offering visitors a place to slow down, breathe, and momentarily step outside the rhythms of the street.
the café’s rippling metal roofline folds toward the street
creating a shaded outdoor seating area at the corner plot
stone-clad walls and curved openings soften the building’s edges
a composition of interlocking volumes beneath a sculptural roof canopy
the sloping roof extends outward, sheltering open-air seating
a deep overhang transforms the sidewalk into a semi-covered social space
the main entrance is set beneath a steeply sloped canopy that draws visitors inward
the sculpted roof lifts and dips to frame views, light, and movement through the café
trees punctuate the roof
the café’s corner condition allows it to open toward multiple directions
the café’s arched openings soften the stone-clad facade
woven reed panels line the underside of the roof
a folded roof edge creates a dramatic threshold
the roof’s sweeping form shelters the entrance
project info:
name: The 1999’s Coffee
architect: KQI Architect
location: Bà Rịa Ward, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
area: 210 square meters
lead architect: Kiến Quân
photographer: Minq Bui | @minqbui
The post rippling metal roof drapes over interlocking stone volumes of vietnamese café appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

