At Lodge Massé, the interiors inform a collective story. Housed in a Haussmannian constructing close to Place Pigalle, the 40-room lodge—unfold over six flooring—was imaged by siblings Éole and Corto Peyron as a intentionally collaborative challenge. Reasonably than collapsing concepts right into a blueprint executed in home, they invited a large circle of architects, designers, artists, and suppliers to contribute distinct items. The result’s a lodge with a robust sense of persona, formed much less by pattern than by the gathering of many thought-about fingers.
Designed by Juliette Gasparetto and Julie Parenti of Gasparetto Parenti, who each skilled at Festen Structure, the rooms are meant to be lived in like a neighborhood condo. No two are alike. Burgundy corridors give solution to light-filled areas with balconies, okoumé wooden, and maritime pine, furnished with customized items by the architects alongside classic furnishings, velvet seating, and Seventies-style carpeting. Right here, we stroll by the lodge profiling the small print and naming the artist/designer behind every.
Pictures by Cobey Arner for Lodge Massé.








