Hugues de Blignières Gives a Haussmannian Apartment Slick New Attitude 

With a handsome mix of 1990s design icons, beguiling architectural interventions, and striking pieces of contemporary art, the designer transforms a grand Paris residence into a sophisticated backdrop for late-night gatherings

Modern living room with white sofas, black chairs, and a fireplace, featuring abstract art and large windows.
In the living room of a Haussmannian apartment transformed by designer Hugues de Blignières, a pair of Voido rocking chairs by Ron Arad and low-slung sofas by Panac Edition face a custom lacquered cocktail table outfitted with a ceramic work by Aurélien Gendras. The painting by Charles Pollock faces a resin mirror by Caia Leifsdotter. Photo: Jerome Galland, styling by Aurore Lameyre

Certain design details are quintessentially, incontrovertibly Haussmannian: 13-foot-high ceilings, parquet de Versailles flooring, sweeping enfilades. Rectilinear stainless steel doorways rarely enter that conversation, but Hugues de Blignières has shown little interest in hewing too closely to convention. The interior designer, who divides his time between Paris, Biarritz, and New York, gravitates toward dauntless gestures, and he deployed several while ushering a storybook residence near Place des États-Unis in Paris’s 16th arrondissement into the present day.

The client, a young entrepreneur and consummate entertainer, envisioned a polished residence tailored to spending long evenings with friends amid his carefully curated collection of minimalist art and sleek, high-gloss furnishings. “It’s a place to, let me say, party,” de Blignières says with a laugh. “And be surrounded by nice art.” No exaggeration there—the client’s collection, split between his homes, office, and storage, encompasses covetable pieces across eras by the likes of Monique Rozanès, Charles Pollock, Robert Couturier, and Victor Guedy.  

Person standing in a modern room with light-colored walls and wood flooring, next to a sleek metal door.
Hugues de Blignières. Photo: Jerome Galland
Modern dining room with black high-back chairs, round table set with glassware, and abstract decor on shelves.
A quartet of Golem chairs by Vico Magistretti cluster around a custom lacquered table in the dining room, which is enveloped in jet-black fabric by Maison Lelièvre. Photo: Jerome Galland, styling by Aurore Lameyre
Modern kitchen with black countertop, contemporary sculptures on island, beige walls, and tall stools on wooden floor.
In the kitchen, de Blignières recreated original molding from the bedroom to crown millwork that conceals appliances. Two stools by Philippe Starck face the bar, which sits underneath a monolithic plaster pendant by Garnier & Linker. Photo: Jerome Galland, styling by Aurore Lameyre

The reality proved more complicated. The client arrived with a trove of 1990s references that might prompt some design connoisseurs to utter the phrase mauvais goût, but De Blignières saw opportunity instead. “He really challenged me to propose something different from what he’s used to seeing,” the designer recalls. Whenever de Blignières gravitated toward the wood and stone palettes that have defined much of his work, the client urged him toward something more contemporary. Together, they embraced the prospect of introducing futuristic, decade-defining pieces by Ron Arad and Philippe Starck into the Haussmannian envelope, tempering their innate flamboyance with custom furnishings that evoke the grandeur of Parisian interiors. One principle informed every decision de Blignières undertook: “I wanted to make sure everything we selected was coherent and had balance.” 

He really challenged me to propose something different from what he’s used to seeing.”

Hugues de Blignières

Modern bedroom featuring a dark bedspread, abstract wall art, light beige walls, and a plush area rug.
A painting by Enrich.R overlooks the primary bedroom, contrasting a wall-mounted Bookworm shelf by Ron Arad. Photo: Jerome Galland, styling by Aurore Lameyre
Luxurious bathroom with black marble walls and floor, white bathtub, framed art, and elegant lighting fixture.
Dark Emperador stone clads most of the primary bath, which is outfitted with a painting by Serge Poliakoff. Photo: Jerome Galland, styling by Aurore Lameyre

Throughout the 2,200-square-foot apartment, de Blignières maintained a remarkably steady hand. Rather than relying on bursts of color, he achieved depth through unlikely material pairings. Stainless steel recurs, for example, offering a crisp foil to historic plasterwork and pairing handsomely with lacquered surfaces and shadowy marble. In the living room, two glossy Arad loungers face a monolithic white cocktail table, their sheen and silhouettes echoing a stout ceramic by Aurélien Gendras and a moody Charles Pollock canvas nearby. Flanking the fireplace, custom cabinetry conceals a lacquered bar on one side and a DJ station on the other, allowing the salon to transition effortlessly from post-dinner drinks to late-night gatherings. In the dining room, four wiggly Vico Magistretti chairs gather around a bespoke table, their dark profiles practically dissolving into walls sheathed in jet-black Maison Lelièvre fabric. 

Elegant hallway with round table, vase of white flowers, striped rug, and two tall candle holders on either side.
In one of the entry galleries, two monumental candleholders by Boon Room flank a custom lacquered table. Photo: Jerome Galland, styling by Aurore Lameyre
Modern white bar cabinet with open top showing crystal glasses and a decanter, set in an elegant living room.
De Blignières fashioned a custom bar for the client, who entertains frequently. Photo: Jerome Galland, styling by Aurore Lameyre

Monochromatic palettes can quickly flatten into uniformity, but de Blignières approached this one with unusual discipline. He calibrated the apartment room by room, ascertaining how each artwork and furnishing interacted once installed. The process triggered several key adjustments. The Pollock canvas, earmarked for the primary bedroom, ultimately migrated to the living room, its smoky palette forging stronger connections with the room’s glossy black punches. In its place, de Blignières selected a marble slab–like painting by Enrich.R that mirrors the primary bath’s immersive expanses of Dark Emperador stone. “I wanted something more peaceful in the bedroom,” he says. The quieter artwork also allows a twisting wall-mounted Ron Arad bookshelf to command attention nearby. 

I wanted to make sure everything we selected was coherent and had balance.” 

Hugues de Blignières

Modern living room with sleek black chair, minimalist kitchen, and elegant decor in a light, neutral color palette.
Brushed stainless steel portals demarcate the kitchen. The bronze sculpture on the floor is by Victor Guedy. Photo: Jerome Galland, styling by Aurore Lameyre
Elegant room with mirrored doors, stone sculpture on dark pedestal, and intricate wall molding.
Guedy also made the sculpture on a plinth in the hallway. Photo: Jerome Galland, styling by Aurore Lameyre

One of the apartment’s most unexpected interventions awaits in the kitchen. A brushed stainless steel portal slices through the ornate plasterwork, announcing the room beyond as a distinctly contemporary insertion within the Haussmannian shell. Recognizing his client’s penchant for entertaining, de Blignières conceived the kitchen with the ambience of an elegant bar suited to foster cocktails and conversation deep into the evening. “I didn’t want the kitchen to look like a kitchen,” he says. Appliances, meanwhile, disappear behind meticulously detailed millwork crowned with architectural detailing that carries a surprising backstory.  

The sweeping crown moldings that frame the kitchen feel perfectly at home within the apartment’s historic envelope, yet are a recent addition. De Blignières borrowed the profile from the bedroom and recreated it in the kitchen, extending a detail he admired into an entirely new setting. “It was such an interesting detail, so we duplicated it,” he says. The maneuver reflects a recurring thread in his work: identifying compelling architectural elements and reinterpreting them in unexpected ways elsewhere.  

Large round wall mirror with silver frame reflecting room, above two brown leather stools on black metal frames, tiled floor.
A pair of antique curule stools sit underneath a voluptuous bagel-shaped mirror in the entry hall. Photo: Jerome Galland, styling by Aurore Lameyre
Elegant living room with ornate mirror above black fireplace, modern decor, and stack of books on white carpet.
A reflective sculpture by Monique Rozanès, sourced from Galerie Yves Gastou, sits in the living room. Photo: Jerome Galland, styling by Aurore Lameyre

Yet de Blignières points to a far simpler moment as his favorite, in one of the two entrance halls. The first serves a practical purpose, welcoming guests with a voluptuous, bagel-shaped mirror suspended above a pair of antique curule stools. Beyond it lies a second gallery that once amounted to little more than leftover square footage. De Blignières recast the passage into a moment of grand arrival, punctuating it with towering bronze candleholders flanking a central table topped with an Aristide Maillol sculpture. “This waste of space enhances the other spaces,” he says. “Here, you get a hint of everything that lies ahead.”