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Thursday, April 30, 2026

RETRO FILES / SCENE FROM THE LEFT BANK OF PARIS CIRCA 1895:

Intersection of BoulevardArango and Boulevard de Port Royal (not so many cars and plenty of horse power). 
Boulevard Arago at Port-Royal, about 1895. The junction is already in its present form—broad carriageways, straight sightlines, and rows of evenly spaced trees. A tramcar crosses the tracks at the center of the frame, sharing the street with horse carts and foot traffic. Men in dark coats stand or move at an unhurried pace, some stepping into the roadway without concern. The buildings, recently completed, line the boulevard in a continuous wall of stone, their height and proportions consistent from corner to corner. There is a definite uniformity here, the kind seen in Washington, where design was settled in advance and carried through without much deviation. It stands in contrast to New York, which took more of Chicago’s course—practical, fast, and less concerned with keeping every façade in line. In this Paris scene, electric traction is in service, but horses still handle most of the haulage. There are no motorcars in view. The street was laid out for the future, and it shows—each element in place, doing its work as intended. 

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

DESIGN/ WHO THE HECK IS P.F. CHANG?

 


In an era when national restaurant brands often flatten into sameness, P.F. Chang's has sustained a visual identity that reads as deliberate rather than formulaic. The architecture and interiors carry a controlled theatricality, one that signals continuity across locations without slipping into repetition. It is a rare balance. You recognize the space immediately, yet it avoids the fatigue that typically accompanies scale. 

 Much of that coherence traces back to Tony Chi and his firm Tonychi Studio. From the beginning, Chi approached the project as a system of design principles rather than a fixed template. The result is a vocabulary that can be adapted to different footprints and cities while maintaining a consistent tone. Materials tend toward dark lacquer, stone, and warm wood. The palette is restrained, anchored in black with calibrated use of red. Lighting is handled with particular care, emphasizing depth and shadow over brightness. 

 


Architecturally, the brand relies on a few defining gestures. The entry sequence is formal, often marked by the now-signature guardian horse statues, which function as both threshold and emblem. Interiors favor height where possible, allowing dining rooms to open upward rather than compress inward. Sightlines are considered, with layered spaces that move from bar to dining room in a measured progression. The effect is not grand in the traditional sense, but it is composed, with a clear sense of arrival and containment. 

 The company itself dates to 1993, founded through the partnership of Paul Fleming and Philip Chiang. What began as a single restaurant in Scottsdale has grown into a global presence, with more than 300 locations across the United States and international markets. That scale makes the consistency of its architectural expression all the more notable. It is one thing to design a compelling flagship. It is another to translate that sensibility hundreds of times without diluting it. 

 As for the name, it continues to carry a certain ambiguity that works in the brand’s favor. “P.F.” refers to Fleming; “Chang” to Chiang. The pairing reads as a single figure, but in reality it represents a collaboration between operational discipline and culinary lineage, a dual authorship that is echoed in the built environment itself. 

 For a design team, the lesson is straightforward and difficult at once. Establish a language. Protect it. Allow it to evolve without losing its grammar. P.F. Chang’s demonstrates that even at scale, architecture can retain a point of view.