To savor a fresh baguette from a bakery in Paris is truly a feast for the senses, and often a highlight for foodies on holiday abroad. Few offerings stateside compare, though, with grab-and-go bakeries that all too often imitate the look of a standard French café, with little variation.
The Bread Club in Dallas offers a different experience, with a contemporary take on traditional fare and favorite spots in the City of Light. Designed by INK+ ORO Creatives and inspired by the ritual of bringing loaves home from a Parisian market, it looks sophisticated without the contrived elements that would overwhelm the 1,120-square-foot eatery.
“The biggest challenge was reminding ourselves that we couldn’t turn the space into a French boulangerie,” says Tiffany Woodson, founder and CEO of the studio. “We kept coming back to strong architectural basics, trusting that restraint would do more to enhance the concept and showcase the product more than any decorative flourish could.”
The curved plaster ceiling adds a sense of volume, yet doesn’t seem heavy. It also serves as a marker that defines where customers line up, and highlights a main point of interaction, the counter. Delicate light boxes illuminate fresh goods, while shelving is accessible to both front-of-house staff and bakers that work in the rear. A coordinating vertical display stores the signature baguettes, and matching cases hold cold beverages and provisions.
The overall palette is neutral, but has just enough warmth, which forms a backdrop that will still align with the rest of the interior even as items on the menu or other facets change. Blue lettering on signage offers a hint of color. Luxe touches evoke the same softness as bread. Tiles with a subtle crackle finish complement the custom millwork. Walls with the same treatment used overhead provide a buttery texture throughout.
The Bread Club blends the essence of Paris and its home base to reimagine what a bakery can be, no matter the location. “There’s a subtle nod to Texas wheat woven into the design’s sensibility, but it’s never literal,” Woodson notes. “It gives the space a timeless, unpretentious quality that feels welcoming to everyone.”
To see this and other works by the design firm, visit inkandoro.com.
Photography by Aaron Dougherty.




















