Porter & Frye
Porter & Frye is Minneapolis’ newest fine dining restaurant. Our design team likes to think it’s the crown jewel of the Ivy redevelopment - even if its main dining room is in the basement. Two level restaurants are never easy to operate and can often feel disconnected, but the team assembled by Walsh Bishop Senior Designer Ed Wilms knew this space had a unique opportunity.
When Wilms and Owner Jeff Laux first toured the location, it was late in the development of the overall project, but standing in what is now the elegantly sparse dining room of P&F, you would have never known. The basement was dark, oppressive and filled with water mains, piping, HVAC ductwork. What little space that was left over was consumed with tables and chairs for a makeshift break room for the construction team of the tower.
Some sort of grand stair had always been planned to the lower level, but the concept plans from earlier designs called for it in the center of the room. Not only did that place it squarely in the midst of prime steak eatin’ real estate, it also did nothing to lighten the space visually. Wilms and Laux agreed from the first moment, that the stair should be moved to the corner taking advantage of the existing structure (read cheaper) and connecting an opening in the floor with natural daylight from the street level windows and window wells (read what a wow!).
The new grand stair makes the transition from day time lunches and happy hour revelry to elegant eatery below a true ritual. Descending the stair you approach the VIP see-and-be-seen booth that sits below and cascade of glass chandeliers. Custom designed oval dining booths offer privacy for dinner conversation - yet still let you survey the entire dining room. Metallic shear draperies allow the room to be divided into small rooms for private parties.
And to top it all off, Chef Steven Brown is making some of the most interesting and accessible food this side of the Mississippi.

