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A Parisian retail icon rises from the ashes

A Parisian retail icon rises from the ashes, all contempora­ry guns blazing, thanks to an extensive and sensitive renovation by a quartet of design studios

- PHOTOGRAPH­Y: PATRICIA SCHWOERER WRITER: AMY SERAFIN

When Paris’ iconic department store La Samaritain­e closed in 2005 for safety reasons, it had clearly seen better days. It was once the place you went to buy a new broom, or to take visitors for a spectacula­r view of the Seine, but its art nouveau interior had aged into a state of permanent melancholy. A salesman named Ernest Cognacq, with his wife Marie-louise, opened a store on this spot in 1870. As it grew, the architect Frantz Jourdain convinced them to erect a new building that would bring ‘art into the street’. They inaugurate­d his light-filled, iron-framed art nouveau building in 1910, followed by Henri Sauvage’s art deco extension in 1928. But by the 1970s, the Samaritain­e’s sales were in decline and, in 2001, the luxury goods group LVMH acquired the store’s four timeworn buildings.

After 16 years of legal wrangling and constructi­on, LVMH has finally unveiled the new Samaritain­e, run by the group’s travel retailer DFS. LVMH hired four separate firms to redesign different parts of the store, while specialist contractor­s were brought in to painstakin­gly renovate historical features, such as the magnificen­t glass roof, grand staircase, peacock frescoes on the top floor, and enamelled lava panels on the façade.

Japanese architectu­re studio SANAA was given the task of unifying the store. It added two glass-roofed courtyards and replaced a nondescrip­t 19th-century building on Rue de Rivoli with a new structure fronted by rippling glass. Though detractors compare this to a shower curtain, it provides a strong, minimalist contrast to the ornate art nouveau façade. SANAA also created a glass mosaic floor for the top level of the art nouveau building, referencin­g the glass floors that covered the entire store in Jourdain’s original design.

Each level is now dedicated to a carefully curated shopping category, with islands of discovery here and there (art from Galerie Perrotin, customised Ruinart bottles, ‘street caviar’ sandwiches). There are 12 unique food vendors scattered throughout, and the top floor is completely devoted to food.

The Toronto/new York firm Yabu Pushelberg redesigned the art nouveau

interior, now known as the Pont Neuf side. The original brief was aimed at foreign tourists, but the designers were determined that the store maintain a Parisian flavour. ‘The Samaritain­e had been a big, giant, glorious general store for the people of Paris,’ says George Yabu. ‘So we thought, why don’t we make it resonate with the locals as well?’

The firm set out to find a balance between history and modernity. The art nouveau context was a challenge and, at times, historical choices were questioned, such as the original store’s signature colour, an egg yolk yellow. (‘Maybe the architect had a bad day?’ says Yabu.) The shade was softened, and the store’s colours are now an eyepleasin­g mix of golden tones, such as bronze metals and blond woods, and the ironwork’s original grey-blue. The flooring – 6,000 sq m of terrazzo handlaid with marble insets

– is the work of the New York-based Karen Pearse. The designers had to argue for it, since terrazzo is not French, but it makes a nod to Paris’ cobbleston­es and its fluidity works well with art nouveau. Says Glenn Pushelberg, ‘The pattern gives another layer of character to the whole thing, a romantic meaning that’s appropriat­e for Paris.’

Inspired by The Flâneur, Edmund White’s book on Paris, the designers wanted the Samaritain­e to be a place for strolling, and the building’s bones lent themselves to this. ‘The floor plates are shallow,’ says Pushelberg. ‘You understand what’s around you, and it seduces you in a serene and intrinsica­lly beautiful way without trapping you like an old-school department store.’

Rather than interior walls, the space has been divided using custom-made rugs and furniture in simple shapes and classic materials. DFS wanted to put merchandis­e in the ground floor atrium, so the original floor pattern was used to create a graceful metal and glass pavilion. Lit on top, it adds to the building’s intricate layers of perspectiv­e, pattern and light.

The basement level is now home to the biggest beauty department in Europe, covering the entire 3,400 sq m footprint of the store. This section was designed by Hubert de Malherbe, who also imbued it with a sense of place. When he won the commission, the first thing he did was go to the top of the building and look down at the view. The islands in the Seine and the medieval streets of the Marais inspired him to create a meandering promenade through the beauty stands. Point de Hongrie parquet serves as alleys, while patterned mosaic tiles delineate different spaces – flowers for fragrances, houndstoot­h for make-up, geometric tiles for skincare. The ceiling is broken up with delicate curving structures of gilded metal tubing. Some resemble café awnings, others the feminine crinolines of Second Empire dresses.

De Malherbe brought elegance to the Eiffel-era columns by adding decorative corbels to the tops and pedestals to the bases.

‘The Samaritain­e seduces you in a serene and intrinsica­lly beautiful way without trapping you like an old-school department store’

‘These add a certain sophistica­tion, so people think “this can’t be a basement”,’ he says. Though the ceiling isn’t high, the space never feels undergroun­d, thanks to a combinatio­n of artificial light and daylight from above.

As you reach the north end of the beauty department, the wood floors turn to concrete, and the decorated white ceilings to industrial metal. This is the Rue de Rivoli side, where the feel is more street than rue. Paris studio Ciguë designed its three levels – young beauty brands undergroun­d and two floors of edgier fashion above. SANAA’S transparen­t wall creates visual continuity between the street and the interior, and Ciguë’s design brings the city into the cylindrica­l space.

To ensure that visitors entering from the street do not automatica­lly take the lift down to the beauty section and swan off into the historic part of the store, the architects use circular floor inserts and overhead lighting to coax them to either side. Drawing a link between the city’s heritage and SANAA’S contempora­ry design, the Ciguë team came up with a ‘collage’ of brute materials and historical fragments. Sawed-off pieces of Haussmanni­an architectu­re serve as dressing rooms. Classical statues, Morris columns and blocky stools (like road barriers, perfect for checking your phone) punctuate the space. Everything can be moved around, like a constructi­on set, as more experiment­al brands come or go. ‘The interior is supple and chaotic, in a positive way,’ says Ciguë’s Alphonse Sarthout. ‘It’s alive, fluid, and in perpetual evolution.’

Flexibilit­y will be key to any modern store’s survival in an era where nobody has to leave home to shop anymore. Department stores used to be cathedrals of consumptio­n but now must offer unique, ever-changing experience­s. With its exclusive brands, tapasand-cocktails and 21st-century Parisian vibe, the new Samaritain­e aims to do just that. *

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 ??  ?? This page, the store’s floor pattern was used to create a top-lit metal and glass pavilion for the ground floor atrium Opposite, design studio Yabu Pushelberg softened the Samaritain­e’s original signature colour in egg yolk yellow to more golden tones, which sit well against the grand staircase’s grey-blue ironwork
This page, the store’s floor pattern was used to create a top-lit metal and glass pavilion for the ground floor atrium Opposite, design studio Yabu Pushelberg softened the Samaritain­e’s original signature colour in egg yolk yellow to more golden tones, which sit well against the grand staircase’s grey-blue ironwork
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 ??  ?? The store’s historical features, including the golden-hued peacock frescoes under the glass atrium roof, above, and the swirling wrought iron balustrade­s, opposite, were painstakin­gly renovated by specialist contractor­s
The store’s historical features, including the golden-hued peacock frescoes under the glass atrium roof, above, and the swirling wrought iron balustrade­s, opposite, were painstakin­gly renovated by specialist contractor­s

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