Family

Like a warm and yet radical tree house, filled with light, high up in a building with modernist overtones

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At

Kim Haddou and Florent Dufourcq

Light in winter! The tone is set by interior design duo Kim Haddou and Florent Dufourcq. Pale surfaces, stone and marble, large mirrors and other reflective materials, beautiful woods and treasured possessions, not to mention a spectacularly immaculate carpet, are a nod to the 1960s and 1970s and a certain way of life. We remember them from back in 2018, when they won the Van Cleef & Arpels Grand Jury Prize during the Toulon Design Parade. Since then, the young graduates – class of 2015 – from the École Camondo have grown in confidence. And in scale. The Socialite Family met them at their home, their modernist-style tree house, which they have completely refurbished and where, in their own words, they rest their eyes.

Location

Paris

Author

Elsa Cau

Photographer

Jeanne Perrotte

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TSF

Kim, Florent, could you introduce yourselves, please?

Kim

I’m 32, I’m an interior designer, and I’ve been living and working with Florent since 2018.

Florent

I’m 35. I’m also an interior designer. We live and work in Paris.

TSF

What is your background?

Florent

We met at the École Camondo, where we were studying architecture. We’re from the class of 2015 (editor’s note: as is Clément Daventure, from the Orsini Daventure duo). We both worked in agencies when we left the Camondo, but we very quickly came to the conclusion we should work together in a more structured and professional way. Kim went to London, to an agency where she did a lot of retail work (editor’s note: interior design for points of sale), then came back to Paris, where she worked for Charlotte Perelman, and I worked for Starck.

TSF

What did you learn from these experiences?

Florent

I wanted to do hotels: it was a childhood dream! Starck was the ideal agency for this. And very instructive, too. These were large-scale hotel projects that were quite significant in terms of size, budget and number of rooms, involving a huge number of people and requiring a great deal of technical precision, because, at this scale, there’s no room for approximation, etc.

TSF

What made you decide to join forces?

Kim

We had the opportunity to work on our first project together. It was for the Design Parade in Toulon in 2018. We delivered a small reading room designed like a little troglodyte library. We called it Grotto. We designed an entire wall filled with niches. In a broader sense, at the school, we started to work together on some projects, professional affinities developed, and certain ways of working came together: all this was already apparent during our studies. Inevitably, when you find a good work partner, you want to carry on together.

Florent

We already trusted each other. Whether it’s at school or afterwards, it’s difficult to work alone and feel totally confident when submitting a project proposal. Two people are stronger, and we trust each other’s vision and taste.

Florent Dufourcq

One thing we still don't agree on is lampshades. Kim hates lampshades!

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For the stainless steel kitchen, the duo chose to create a "mobile" set: each element is on legs and can be moved.

TSF

How do you work together on a day-to-day basis? Do you complement each other?

Kim

Florent often has the first idea, the first creative impulse. He usually goes too far, and I try to tone things down (laughs). The dialogue begins; we go back and forth, we see what is feasible, we mutually enrich the project, and I tweak it a little. I also like the question of proportions and spaces.

Florent

It’s true that I sometimes overdo it. Our discussions always help us find the right balance in our projects.

Kim

We often say that when we manage to reach agreement it’s because we’ve got it right.

TSF

What is the Haddou-Dufourcq style?

Kim

I don’t think you can confine it to just one style or one taste. It depends on the client’s plans and the place itself. We can design restrained, minimalist settings like our apartment, which is fairly uncluttered, but we can also explode into colour and play with materials, as we did for Hermès in Saint-Tropez, for example. Perhaps we don’t really have a predefined style: it’s whatever suits us! We don’t want to do the same thing over and over again.

Florent

On the other hand, we attach particular importance to drawing. Drawing is also a way of thinking about space, volume, how rooms fit together, circulation, light and how to deal with technical issues. You won’t necessarily see these ideas in the finished project, but they do exist!

Kim

I’d also say that we attach particular importance to the choice of materials. In Saint-Tropez, for example, the colour came from the material: we worked with Salernes terracotta.

Florent

That’s true! We’re always trying to find materials that are right, that chime together, and that can give us the colourimetry needed to liven up the spaces we’re working on.

Kim

I also think it’s important for us to succeed in creating places that are perceived as timeless. Our biggest fear is of saying to ourselves: this is three years old; we don’t want it any more. That it bears too much of the stamp of its time.

Florent

And we mustn’t forget that time is of the essence in the projects we undertake… Deadlines are sometimes difficult to manage. No matter how hard you try to complete a project as quickly as possible, unforeseen circumstances always crop up! When you’re doing a shop, the project is finished in six months: there’s a kind of immediacy. Working on a hotel, for example, takes much longer. There are things that you drew three years earlier. All these factors have to be taken into account to ensure that everything is just right.

TSF

I get the impression that the younger generation of interior designers is working a lot – again – with drawing, more so than with 3D design.

Kim

I think it’s often interior designers who use patterns a lot.

Florent

As far as we’re concerned, we draw a lot, and we also do a lot of 3D. 3D allows you to immerse yourself in a location and work from all angles. Clients often need to see if the atmosphere and ambience work for them.

Kim

Drawing allows us to get started, to talk to each other easily, to talk to craftspeople and other companies, and to try things out quickly too. For us, it’s an instant tool. 3D allows us to model everything and really project ourselves into the space. It’s important to us that our projects are architectural, in other words, not just decorative elements added to a space.

TSF

Do you have any favourite materials?

Kim

We love mirrors. It’s neither a fine nor a precious material… But mirrors allow us to bring light into a space – they reflect it, give it depth, and can make spaces look twice the size. And sometimes, we discover perspectives that we hadn’t spotted before. That’s what we’ve done here at home.

Florent

There’s always something a bit magical and poetic about a mirror because the reflection is never totally faithful to reality… We like to use tinted, smoked mirrors that blur this perception. It’s a kind of distortion of reality that we love.

TSF

How has your upbringing and your surroundings influenced your taste?

Kim

I grew up in Auvergne, and my parents lived in a sort of 1990s-style Villa Noailles, very modern, with a roof terrace and very little interior decoration – it was the architecture that set the tone. Andrée Putman-style black and white tiles in the bathroom… I just wanted to be like everyone else and live in a normal house (laughs). But in the end, I think it had a big influence on me. Even though I love very different people too! But I like the restraint of a very architectural approach with clear lines.

Florent

I was born and grew up in Picardy, in a medieval town. Basically, everything there dates back to the Middle Ages and the Renaissance! There was no such thing as contemporary architecture there. We lived in a very old house with creaking woodwork and wooden floors. You couldn’t play marbles in the living room because they went off by themselves in the opposite direction, and the floors were tilted in all directions.

Kim

Your parents collect old statues. The first time I went to his place, I was a bit scared the first night (laughs).

Florent

It is a bit crowded… In any case, aesthetics are very important to my parents; they love travelling, bargain hunting and finding objects that tell stories. I’m sure that had a big influence on me, too. But compared to that draughty old house, when Kim and I moved into this apartment, I felt like I was reliving the madness of the 1960s and 1970s when anyone could buy a small flat with central heating, a bathroom and all the home comforts.

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Picked up somewhat randomly by the couple, this Christofle bowl from the 1930s turned out to have been designed for the famous ocean liner Normandie.

Picked up somewhat randomly by the couple, this Christofle bowl from the 1930s turned out to have been designed for the famous ocean liner Normandie.

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TSF

How do your tastes influence each other?

Kim

Florent has retained his taste for accumulating things. You can’t see it at home because we decided to go in a different direction when we arrived here. But it’s true that he loves objects, and he’s passed on to me a taste I didn’t necessarily have at the outset. He’s shown me that even a small object has a story, and you can create a kind of family of pieces that interact with each other, even if they sometimes have nothing to do with each other.

Florent

Objects have souls! And I love researching our finds.

Kim

Personally, I like things that are a bit “sharper”, the design of the 1980s and 1990s. Florent tends to be more imaginative. But by living and working and spending all our time together, we’ve developed a sort of shared taste without even needing to say anything to each other.

TSF

How did you find this apartment?

Kim

The building that housed the flat we rented was up for sale. We knew we were leaving, so we started looking for a new place to live. It took us a while! I love viewing apartments; that’s my problem. I’m very fussy, and I viewed 25. This one was the 26th. We wanted something a little original for a first purchase. We never thought we’d find an apartment like this in a building that dates back to the late 1960s or early 1970s. It wasn’t what we were looking for, and the advert didn’t really appeal. Finally, one fine day, we visited it… Despite the wallpaper, the light was superb, and the space was divided up by too many partitions… We loved the two levels separated by a few steps, which gave us the impression of being in a tree house and the bathroom, where we kept the slightly kitsch original marble. We could see ourselves here. We also loved the entrance to the building. It was designed by Jean Gouriou, which gives it the impression of being in Milan! On the other hand, there was a lot of work to be done.

TSF

What work have you done here?

Florent

We kept the bathroom and simply repainted the walls above the marble and removed the bidet. As for the rest, we tried to bring out the original design, and the plan of the apartment, which had been drowned out by the somewhat hasty work carried out over the decades. The accumulation of ‘little touches’ meant that the space had become impossible to ‘read’. We also wanted to bring out the mineral character of the place, in response to the building, where stone is very prominent. Then, we devised our own version of the post-war boom utopia we were talking about earlier: living with plush, white carpets in the main room, for example. The most important thing for us was also to rest our eyes. That’s why most of the colours in the apartment are quite neutral, because we wanted to achieve this harmony. Our bedroom had to be in keeping with the rest, i.e. very soft. We wanted to play on the light that comes in here at night. The decor is simple: a large wall of curtains. Like an enveloping cocoon. You don’t feel like you’re in Paris any more. And nowhere else, for that matter!

TSF

Tell me about one of your favourite items here.

Florent

This fruit bowl, sitting on the dining room table. It was made by Christofle in the 1930s. We came across it without knowing what it was, but I did some research and discovered that it was part of a collection designed for the famous liner Normandie. It’s a real piece of our decorative arts history!

Kim

Personally, I’d like to talk about our kitchen, which is all stainless steel and modular. We didn’t want wall cupboards or fixed kitchen furniture. So we’ve created a ‘mobile’ kitchen, with every element on a stand that can be moved around. And it’s a kitchen with a carpet… We didn’t dare think about the carpet straight away when we first came here. But we ended up saying that we could only do that at home, that no client would agree to put a white carpet in a living room: it would be too messy… But we’re very happy with it. The utopia of walking about barefoot on the floor!

TSF

Is there anything you disagree about?

Florent

One thing we still don’t agree on is lampshades. Kim hates lampshades!

Kim

Well, as there isn’t much room here, we had to come to an agreement.

TSF

What’s new at the Haddou-Dufourcq studio?

Kim

The opening of the Lilou hotel in Hyères in the spring. A hotel comprised of 37 rooms, a restaurant, and a bar managed by David Pirone (La Reine Jane, Popolo in Hyères) on which we have been working for nearly three years.

TSF

Do you have any good local go-to places you’d like to suggest?

Kim & Florent

Three addresses with a timeless atmosphere: Brasserie Boffinger in Bastille for its decor, onion soup with munster cheese, and their delicious sauerkraut; Chez Janou, right next to our offices for the lunch menu or a pastis on the terrace in the late afternoon during the summer. And finally, Café l’Arsenal at the corner of Rue de Birague and Rue Saint-Antoine for Jean-Paul and his truffade. As you may have guessed, we enjoy good food!

TSF

What’s your favourite piece from The Socialite Family collection?

Kim & Florent

The Tokyo Table in cream white lacquer for its timeless aspect; it’s a shade we love. We also appreciate its simple and elegant line that goes well with everything!

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