Dining is not a static space but a choreography of spatial conditions that shape how people gather, interact, and share food.
This project constructs an architectural framework by breaking the act of dining into distinct conditions and reorganizing them through design.
Rather than following a fixed sequence, these conditions are arranged in multiple ways to produce different forms of encounter, ranging from moments of closeness to situations of distance, observation, or overlap.
Through this approach, the project redefines dining as an open system in which spatial relationships are actively composed rather than predetermined.

