Aesop Covent Garden by Ciguë

The curved plasterwork of typical Mediterranean architecture influenced the smooth white interior of this store for skin and haircare brand Aesop in London’s Covent Garden.

Aesop Covent Garden by Ciguë

Aesop Covent Garden is the fifth store by French studio Ciguë. The team designed shelves and surfaces with naturally chamfered edges, just like in the old houses of Greece, Spain and Italy.

“We did a residential project for a family in Paris and the staircase was in traditional plaster,” designer Hugo Haas told Dezeen. “I thought this finish would make a really beautiful concept for Aesop.”

Aesop Covent Garden by Ciguë

The shelves are loosely laid out in seven different zones, for displaying each of Aesop’s product ranges, while the sink and countertop run along one wall.

The floor is covered with hexagonal green tiles that are engraved with geometric patterns. “We wanted something in contrast, to find a balance,” said Haas.

Aesop Covent Garden by Ciguë

This hexagonal motif is also picked up elsewhere, including on the perforations in the sink’s plughole.

“It’s possible you don’t notice it, and it’s ok,” said Haas, “but I like the feeling when you notice it. It was all about developing a formal language.”

Aesop Covent Garden by Ciguë

A custom-made lamp is suspended from the ceiling, built using industrial fixtures from the 1920s, while plants frame an extra window at the rear of the space.

Ciguë’s past projects for Aesop include a Paris store where items are displayed on rows of hand-made iron nails and a north London shop modelled on a 1930s medical laboratory. See more design by Ciguë »

Aesop Covent Garden by Ciguë

Dezeen interviewed Aesop founder Dennis Paphitis last year about why no two stores have the same design. “I was horrified at the thought of a soulless chain,” he said.

Other Aesop stores have been designed by well-known architects and designers, from Japanese architect Jo Nagasaka to London designer Ilse Crawford and American architect William O’Brien Jr. See more Aesop stores on Dezeen »

Here’s some more information from Aesop:


Aesop opens in Covent Garden

A hand-crafted space that honours the art of plastering

London recently welcomed its sixth Aesop signature store, in Covent Garden.

This fresh collaboration with Parisian architects Ciguë began with four key design references: a Virginia Woolf quote, a Francis Bacon painting, a Henry Moore sculpture, and an excerpt from Beauty and the Beast. These inspired a space that eloquently expresses the brand, just as it embodies Ciguë’s philosophy: ‘We are very curious about history, and very attentive to transformations. We look out for old know-how and poetry in functionality.’

The brilliantly whitewashed walls reflect abundant natural light, which warms during the afternoon in step with neighbouring pubs. Exposed copper plumbing and light fixtures offer utilitarian adornment. A floor of engraved green cement tiles pays homage to the area’s Italianate piazza – London’s first open square, constructed in the seventeenth century. The colour is replicated in lush vegetation which climbs the walls from an interior window box, complementing the neighbouring gardens of Saint Paul’s Church.

The post Aesop Covent Garden
by Ciguë
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Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

Glass bottles rest on rows of hand-made iron nails along the walls of this Aesop skin and haircare shop in Paris by French designers Ciguë (+ slideshow).

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

Located in one of the city’s oldest neighbourhoods, Aesop Tiquetonne was inspired by old-fashioned workshops and garages, where tools are often fixed to the walls with hooks or nails.

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

Architect Hugo Haas told Dezeen that he had bought the nails during a visit to Japan, and had decided later to use them to create an entire shelving system. ”The main idea with Aesop is to find different ways of displaying their products,” said Haas. ”The bottles are so classical they have their own existence. They just need a good background to help them levitate.”

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

The square-sectioned nails form neat rows along the sycamore-covered walls, creating spaces to hang and stand products of different sizes. ”These old nails are pretty hard to control, so to make sure we had straight lines we laser-drilled them to the wall,” explained Haas.

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

Unlike other Aesop stores designed by Ciguë, the counter and sink are separated from one another, due to the narrowness of the shop.

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

The taps and pipes are made from unpolished steel, and the architects chose to fit them themselves instead of consulting a plumber.

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

Pale blue paint gives the shop a colourful exterior. “The only place we wanted to put colour was the window,” said Haas. “We didn’t want to use colour in the store, as we prefer to use the colours that are inherent to materials. It seems a more natural process for us.”

Aesop Tiquetonne by Ciguë

Aesop regularly commission designers to come up with unique concepts for their stores and this is the fifth one created by Ciguë. Others we’ve featured by the studio include one filled with steel caps from the city’s plumbing network and one modelled on a medical laboratory.

See all our stories about Aesop »

Here’s some text from Aesop:


Aesop’s latest Parisian signature space, a fresh collaboration with Cigue, opened in rue Tiquetonne in mid-June. Home to many tradesmen in the mid-twentieth century, the area features a number of workshops that have remained unchanged for decades. The store’s design is entirely in keeping with this aesthetic – reminiscent of a garden workshop housing well-worn tools that defy obsolescence.

The design makes ingenious use of the most humble materials; shelving is fashioned from rows of large, hand-made square-sectioned wrought iron nailed – on which Aesop products are arranged like lovingly ordered implements. Walls feature stone and raw sycamore maple wood, which is also used for a large sink. A waxed concrete floor and pipes and taps of unpolished steel add further references to modest industry. The interior represents not only respect for local tradition, but a marriage of intelligent design, straightforward functionality and unadorned beauty.

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by Ciguë
appeared first on Dezeen.

Aesop Islington by Ciguë

French designers Ciguë modelled this north London store for skin and haircare brand Aesop on a 1930s medical laboratory.

Aesop Islington by Ciguë

Bottles and tubes are lined up in neat rows on metal shelves, intended to reference the “modest utilitarian spaces of the early twentieth century,” says Aesop.

Aesop Islington by Ciguë

Ciguë used a palette of traditional materials, including reclaimed wood sourced from a 200-year-old French monastery for the floors and cabinets.

Aesop Islington by Ciguë

A single surface of polished white marble provides worktops and washbasins, with glass taps and pipes that show liquid flowing through them.

Aesop Islington by Ciguë

Wooden plant pots infill some of shelves, adding splashes of colour between the dark brown bottles, while more leafy plants grow in a hollow behind the sinks.

Aesop Islington by Ciguë

Aesop regularly commission designers to come up with unique concepts for their stores and Aesop Islington is the fourth one created by Ciguë. Another we’ve featured by the studio is a Paris shop filled with steel caps from the city’s plumbing network.

Other interesting branches include a Singapore shop with coconut-husk string hanging from the ceiling and a New York kiosk made from piles of newspapersSee all our stories about Aesop here.

The brand’s founder Dennis Paphitis also recently started up a gentlemen’s outfitters in an old factory in Melbourne. Read more in our earlier story.

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by Ciguë
appeared first on Dezeen.

Aesop Le Marais by Ciguë

Aesop Le Marais by Ciguë

Skincare products at Aesop‘s latest store in Paris are displayed on 427 steel caps that would normally be used in the city’s plumbing network.

Aesop Le Marais by Ciguë

Designed by Parisian studio Ciguë, the shop is located in the winding streets of the historically aristocratic Le Marais district.

Aesop Le Marais by Ciguë

The wall-mounted dishes are filled with clear resin to form a flat surface and finished in varying degrees of blackened, rusted and stripped steel. Larger plumbing caps create basins in the polished concrete counters.

Aesop Le Marais by Ciguë

The cast iron spotlights, steel window frames and plant pots in the courtyard beyond were all custom-designed by Ciguë.

Aesop Le Marais by Ciguë

Have a look at Aesop’s other stores here, including a kiosk in New York made of 1000 newspapers and another Paris store that’s covered in 3500 pieces of wood.

The information that follows is from Aesop:


Aesop Le Marais

Aesop is pleased to announce the opening of our third Paris store in rue Vieille du Temple in Le Marais. This historical precinct has successively been home to religious orders, nobility and artisans, and was thankfully preserved from Haussmann’s overhaul of Paris.

Today, it displays beautiful buildings in narrow streets, and hosts many excellent cafés and museums. We would not have dreamt of better neighbours.

Aesop Le Marais is a light, minimalist room of polished concrete, with windows on the back wall allowing light to fill the room, and offering a glimpse of lush greenery in the courtyard.

The key element of the design is the integration of 427 small polished steel dishes into the walls, an acknowledgement of the industrial history of this part of Paris. The dishes are, in fact, the curved ‘lids’ which close the pipes used as plumbing throughout the city.

Utilising this material – which is cold to touch yet catches warm light, aesthetically pleasing yet functional – lends the space lyricism and invites our customers to explore and interact with our products.

As always, the design serves to showcase Aesop’s full range of superb skin, hair and body products.

64, rue Vieille du Temple 75003 Paris


See also:

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Aesop Grand Central
Kiosk by Tacklebox
Aesop at Merci
by March Studio
Aesop Aoyama by
Schemata Architecture Office