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New to Place Vendôme is Zoī Vendôme, a wellness sanctuary designed by Sala Hars

By Robb Report Singapore 22 August, 2025

Beyond a personalised approach to prevention, Zoī Vendôme is hopefully proof that good design can also be good for one’s health

Within the prestigious Place Vendôme of Paris, just a stone’s throw away from the Palais Garnier and Park Hyatt, is a captivating new space dedicated to the body and mind. Founded by entrepreneur Paul Dupuy to elevate the wellness experience, Zoī Vendôme trades the soulless medical facility for a true sanctuary of restoration that beckons your return. Beyond a personalised approach to prevention—a 360-degree look at your physiological, metabolic and biological health—Zoī Vendôme hopes to prove that good design can also be good for one’s health.

One of 18 private examination suites, an intimate rotunda centred around a bed. Photo by Zoī Vendôme/Sala Hars 

Designed by the Mexico-based Sala Hars, an eight-year-old architecture firm known for creating spaces that nurture the soul, it explains the flagship’s soothing symmetry and many uplifting details. Hidden behind a discreet black door in a Haussmannian building, patients are whisked through a 1,858-square-metre space that begins with a central white walkway framed by angled wood panels and diffuse lighting. There is nary a reception desk or waiting room in sight, only calm corridors, softly curved transitional spaces and 18 private examination suites designed as intimate rotundas; each centred around a bed, with medical equipment surfaced when needed.

Once your check-up is done, you will be led to two Japanese-inspired onsens as a way to decompress before returning to the grind. Photo by Zoī Vendôme/Sala Hars 

This idea of elevating the medical facility is based on what the architects call, “neon-Baroque”, a new design language that distills Baroque theatricality through a contemporary lens. “What inspired us most from the Baroque was its unique condition of impossibility,” explained co-founder Juan Sala in an interview with Galerie Magazine. “We searched for those conditions in a contemporary way, hiding all thicknesses of materials, of assemblies, almost creating an impossible, plastic architecture—extremely immaterial and material at the same time.”

Zoī Vendôme