Café Slatkine

Geneva, Switzerland
© Federal Studio / Régis Golay
© Federal Studio / Régis Golay
© Federal Studio / Régis Golay
© Federal Studio / Régis Golay
© Federal Studio / Régis Golay
Architects
FdMP architectes
Location
Rue des Chaudronniers 5, 1204 Geneva, Switzerland
Year
2016
Construction management
Thinka Architecture Studio

At the heart of Geneva's old town, Café Slatkine reinvents the genre of the literary cafe, books on one side and bottles on the other.

Opened in 1918 by Mendel Slatkine, the venue is an unmissable, centenary-old institution of Calvin's city. For a long time, it worked as a bookshop only. Two generations later, it made sense to convert the space into a literary cafe, combining the intellectual legacy to something more telling of our time.

In a relatively confined space, narrow in places and with an open window front on the street, the challenge was to bring together books and bottles, mixing heritage and contemporaneity, fiction authors with gossips at the counter. To do so, the architects designed two large shelves placed in front of one another. They shared the same proportions, with three different heights allowing to display items of various sizes. On one side, books are lit from top to bottom, while on the other, bottles receive light from the bottom up to highlight their bases and labels. The whole space (flooring, bar, tables) is covered in oak, giving it warmth, while the walls and ceiling bear copper-coloured paint. The reading room consists of a handful of seats and a few tables to meet and debate. Lamps from the 1920s bring the space an Art Deco influence, somehow bridging classicism and modernity, an ode to the initial bookshop.

A second, more secluded room lies at the end of the cafe—the perfect space for more intimate gatherings. There, a similar shelf with three heights occupies the back wall. An opening from the ceiling fuels the room with natural light in the day, this space being part of the old courtyard. A wall fountain attests to the place's history, with arches and frames cleaned and exposed to highlight the old town's remnants. As always, the merging of contrasts.

The space proved successful. In just a couple of months, it felt like it had always been there. By itself, Café Slatkine enacts the literary scene of a Calvinist St Germain-des-Prés, a place for robust discussions and a couple of drinks.

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