Bernard Dubois incorporates nightclub references into Courrèges' Paris store

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Image of a mirrored fitting area at the Courrèges store

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Image of a mirrored fitting area at the Courrèges store

Thick carpets, mirrored panels and fabric-covered walls populate this clothing store in Paris designed by Belgian architect Bernard Dubois.

The 232-square-metre boutique is located near the Champs-Élysées and belongs to Courrèges – a Parisian label that was launched by fashion designer André Courrèges in 1961.

Interior image of the fabric-covered Courrèges store
Courrèges’ second store in Paris was designed by Bernard Dubois

Optimistic and full of energy, the late designer’s creations placed emphasis on structured lines and featured a predominantly white colour palette.

For the brand’s flagship store, Courrèges’ artistic director Nicolas Di Felice asked Dubois to create an interior that blends this distinctive visual language with subtle references to nightclubs.

Interior image of the beige-hued Courrèges store
Its interior is lined in fabric and thick carpet

The result is a monochrome space with fabric-lined walls and ceilings, thick carpets and rows of mirrors that are set at an angle in a nod to the perspective-bending decor often found in nightlife venues.

“White has always been part of the Courrèges universe,” Dubois told Dezeen. “We decided to embrace this and make it our own, by making it warm, intimate, silent, plush.”

Other references to the brand’s history include shelves and cabinets that were part of a store interior designed by Courrèges in 1967 before being redesigned to match the proportions of the new store.

Interior image of the mirrored changing room at the Courrèges store
Upside-down arches frame the way to the changing rooms

Curved U-shaped elements resembling upside-down arches feature alongside the mirrors towards the back of the store in a homage to classical architecture and space travel.

“I always like to play with classical elements of architecture in my projects, sometimes placing them in different contexts, at different scales than their usual size or context,” Dubois said.

“In this case, placing them upside-down is also a reference to spaceships, where the absence of gravity naturally places things upside down and creates different structural constraints,” he added.

In some areas of the Courrèges store, Dubois deliberately exposed the raw concrete walls, creating a contrast with the softness of the fabric and the carpet.

Interior image of clothing organised in pocket shelving
The interior is rendered almost entirely in beige

The mirrored panels were added to provide perspective and direct the eye to the dressing rooms at the back of the store.

“I always like to structure spaces,” Dubois explained, “give them some depth, play with perspectives, create relationships between different shapes of spaces, giving the impression that the visitor enters into a coherent world.”

Image of the display areas at the Parisian retail space
Only clothing displays provide a colourful contrast

The store is the larger of two Courrèges outposts in Paris. The other store in the Marais neighbourhood was also designed by Dubois.

Bernard Dubois set up his eponymous firm in 2014 after graduating as an architect from La Cambre in Brussels in 2009. Other projects from the studio include a store for Aesop featuring distinctive yellow bricks and a narrow “runway-like” sneaker store for APL.

The photography is by Romain Laprade.

The post Bernard Dubois incorporates nightclub references into Courrèges' Paris store appeared first on Dezeen.

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