Merci
Merci occupies a sprawling former wallpaper factory with three floors of carefully curated fashion, furniture, and design objects.
About Merci
Merci occupies a sprawling former wallpaper factory with three floors of carefully curated fashion, furniture, and design objects. The red Fiat 500 permanently parked in the ground-floor café isn't just decoration-it's functional seating, and the whole space feels more like a stylish friend's loft than a traditional store. What sets it apart is the genuine editorial eye: everything from the €15 notebooks to the €800 ceramics feels intentionally chosen rather than mass-marketed.
The layout encourages wandering-you'll move from vintage band tees on the first floor to Italian ceramics on the second, then down to the basement's dim cinema café where locals nurse single espressos for hours. The book café in the back corner has that lived-in feeling of a neighborhood spot, with worn leather chairs and French literary magazines scattered on low tables. The whole experience feels more like browsing a friend's collection than shopping.
Most visitors rush through treating it like a department store, but Merci rewards slow exploration. The fashion selection skews expensive and trendy rather than timeless-focus on the homeware and books instead. The café food is overpriced and mediocre; come for coffee only. The Madagascar charity angle is genuine but don't expect detailed information about it-this is subtle social responsibility, not virtue signaling.
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