L.A. Roaster Canyon Coffee Opens Its First Storefront—a Warm, Woody Space in Echo Park
Ally Walsh and Casey Wojtalewicz’s new cafe blends single-origin coffee with vinyl records, local art, and minimalist design with a welcoming energy.
Ally Walsh and Casey Wojtalewicz’s new cafe blends single-origin coffee with vinyl records, local art, and minimalist design with a welcoming energy.
In 2105, on their first visit to Georgia O’Keeffe’s Abiquiu, New Mexico, home, Ally Walsh and Casey Wojtalewicz felt an immediate affinity with the space. They appreciated its simplicity: generous natural light, rich adobe walls, and, at the center of her studio, a long plywood table. The home made such an impression on the couple, in fact, that it would inspire the look of their Los Angeles roasting company, Canyon Coffee, started in 2016. But the visual connection was limited to bags the beans were sold in, some merch, and a website—until last week.
Situated prominently on a corner in L.A.’s Echo Park neighborhood, just a few blocks from Elysian Park, the couple’s first storefront translates their passion for restrained design into physical form. For the space, Ally and Casey brought in friends Jon and Masa Klein of Klein Agency—"a no-brainer," says Casey—who they long admired for the sleek simplicity of the restaurants they’ve designed across the city.
In addition to referencing O’Keeffe’s home, Casey and Alley wanted the cafe to reflect Northern California’s Sea Ranch, coffee shops along the Mediterranean where they’ve visited, and the work of Donald Judd, whose furniture they had seen in his New York and Marfa, Texas, homes.
"There’s a simplicity but so much intention in Judd’s designs, and that’s what we wanted for ourselves," Casey says. "We wanted the furniture to be really functional but sturdy."
See the full story on Dwell.com: L.A. Roaster Canyon Coffee Opens Its First Storefront—a Warm, Woody Space in Echo Park