Ah, Paris. It’s effortlessly refined, yet also feels so alive.

Take the new RH Paris Gallery. It feels less like a store and more like a statement about how design can shape experience.

Designed by Foster + Partners, it transforms a 1970s building on the iconic Champs-Élysées into a place where architecture, hospitality, and craftsmanship overlap.

The five-story space blends retail, dining, and exhibition into one cohesive environment.

Visitors enter through a hedge-lined courtyard before arriving at a glass-covered winter garden restaurant that glows with natural light.

Above, a stunning rooftop terrace offers open views across Paris, connecting the interior’s quiet precision to the city beyond. We were particularly awestruck by the seating with carefully planted hedges that surround and envelop the diners.

Inside, the materials are opulent and refined: glass, steel, and stone arranged with a clear sense of rhythm and restraint.

The building’s centerpiece, a retractable glass elevator, disappears when not in use to preserve views of the Eiffel Tower. Every gesture is deliberate and understated (as long as luxury is concerned)

What makes the RH Paris Gallery interesting is how fluid it feels. The restaurant could pass for a living room, the furniture displays for art installations.

It’s less about commerce and more about immersion, a place where the boundaries between design, food, and atmosphere disappear.

In a city filled with grand statements, this project fits in, in the most romantic sense. It’s elegant, purposeful, and calm, a reminder that true luxury often comes from simplicity and space to breathe.

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