When talking about a new restaurant, is it too precocious to quote Foucault? In the context of The Fio Table in Gurugram, it might just be in order. To paraphrase (perhaps too simplistically) what he’d call the technologies of the self, dining becomes a microcosm of modern subjectivity: you are what you eat, but also where, how and why you eat. The act of dining shapes our identities, holds a mirror to our desires and shows us what we value.
EDIDA winner Vritima Wadhwa of Project 810, the designer behind The Fio Table, describes it as an “intimate home.” Light filtering in, a play of textures and exposed materiality. An honest expression runs through the 1700 sq ft restaurant. “The initial discussions were centred around creating a space that felt personal and soulful, where dining felt like a celebration of togetherness,” expands Vritima, who is also the Design Principal at Project 810.
In a culinary landscape chasing distilled authenticity, where does that situate a dining experience that attempts to whisk you away into another culture?