Foster + Partners converts Parisian building into “hospitality-driven” gallery and restaurant

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British studio Foster + Partners has transformed a 1970s building on the Champs-Élysées in Paris into a gallery and studio for US furniture brand RH, topped with a rooftop restaurant.

Foster + Partners worked with RH on the building conversion, aiming to create what it described as a “hospitality-driven gallery space” that brings together retail and leisure.

Foster + Partners has transformed a Parisian building into a gallery for RH

“Our interventions update and enhance the existing building in a way that is sensitive yet impactful,” said Foster + Partners senior partner Giles Robinson.

“The design redefines the retail and hospitality experience to create a truly unique destination in the heart of Paris.”

Furniture by RH is on display with art and antiques

Located on the Champs-Élysées, the RH Paris gallery includes spaces where the brand’s furniture is exhibited alongside art and antiques.

Above, Foster + Partners added two rooftop spaces to the five-storey building.

On a lower-level rooftop, the studio created arched glazed walls enclosing a “winter garden” restaurant, and on an upper level, an outdoor rooftop champagne bar has panoramic views of Paris.

Foster + Partners added rooftop spaces, including a glazed restaurant, to the building

Landscaped outdoor space wraps the building, creating a buffer between it and the streetfront.

A double-height interior design studio for RH is situated at the rear of the building and features glazed facades overlooking the garden outside.


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“The carefully curated hospitality spaces are designed to offer the highest level of luxury and comfort for guests, whether you are dining in the light-filled winter garden or taking in panoramic views of the city from the rooftop bar,” said Foster + Partners architect and partner Sarah Wai.

To give access to all floor levels, including the upper rooftop, Foster + Partners designed a retractable lift.

A champagne bar is located on the upper rooftop level of RH Paris

According to the studio, a conventional lift was not possible due to planning constraints, as an elevator enclosure on the rooftop would block the sightline of the Eiffel Tower from the Champs-Élysées.

Instead, Foster + Partners installed a retractable lift that is concealed from the rooftop under a hatch. When the lift rises to the rooftop, the hatch opens with a glass parapet wall surrounding the opening.

RH’s dedicated interior design studio is located at the rear of the building

Elsewhere on the Champs-Élysées, Foster + Partners transformed an apartment building into an Apple Store topped with a kaleidoscopic solar roof.

Other projects recently completed by the studio include the 270 Park Avenue supertall skyscraper in Manhattan and the Techo International Airport in Cambodia, which is topped with a latticed canopy.

The photography is courtesy of RH Paris.

The post Foster + Partners converts Parisian building into “hospitality-driven” gallery and restaurant appeared first on Dezeen.

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