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Jun 29, 2026

Miami Vice Meets Art Deco Design in this Paris Penthouse

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Miami Vice Meets Art Deco Design in this Paris Penthouse

Interior designer Rudy Guénaire plucked from Brazilian modernism and Villa Necchi’s vibes to interpret his clients’ nonchalant, cool styleBy Anna-Lena ReithPhotography by Ludovic BalayJune 24, 2026
For this project—partially inspired by Miami Vice—Rudy Gunaire and his firm Nightflight built a custom wall unit with...For this Paris penthouse project, Rudy Guénaire and his firm Nightflight built a custom wall unit with Calacatta Nero, white-lacquered fronts and a mirrored insert, which visually enlarges the living space. Design accessories and art objects are displayed on the shelves, such as Jean Gabriel Chauvin’s Graine Ardente (Galerie Maison Rapin) and a 19th-century sculpture made of wood, pigments, and shells from the Solomon Islands. A wooden and metal vase is by Garnier & Linker, the same designers created the rectangular yellow crystal piece on the coffee table by Guénaire.

For Rudy Guénaire, good design is about numbers. After studying mathematics, the creative started off in hospitality before founding his Paris-based interiors firm, Nightflight. He sketches his intentionally proportioned furniture designs by hand (“my team always thinks they’re way too complex at first,” he says with a laugh). And he has a natural impulse towards design based on decades past: His projects are often inspired by Brazilian modernism and the Art Deco hubs of the 1920s. “I like the ’20s and the ’60s because they seem so warm,” the designer says. “In French, we describe that appeal with the adjective solaire.”

Chaiselongue Wohnraum Wollteppich

René Herbst’s reissued Sandows Daybed N°114 sits comfortably on Studio KO’s handmade Huong wool rug for Galerie Diurne. Maxime Adam-Tessier’s 1959 bronze sculpture Le Chevalier (Galerie Gastou) takes center stage atop the new German-oak floorboards. The panels of the glass wall are by Raphaël Barrois.

Rudy Gunaire Porträt

Interior designer Rudy Guénaire.

For a recent 1,938-square-foot Paris penthouse project, Guénaire exercised his nostalgia for many centuries past—starting with the stairwell of the Panthéon-adjacent building it was located in. Built in the années folles, or 1920s, the corridor is lined with stained-glass windows. The owners of the apartment—a DJ and his young family—wanted an interior renovation with a Miami Vice vibe, which Guénaire quickly talked them out of. “When I design living spaces, I always think in terms of its tradition, history, and era,” the designer says.

Schmale Küchenanrichte Kaffeeset von Luc Lanel aus Sterlingsilber und Palisander EdelstahlFronten

The living room is peppered with standout pieces of furniture like Petite Friture’s reissue of René Herbst’s tubular-steel chaise longue, and Philippe Starck’s aluminum Romantica chair. Two horizontally elongated, sandblasted Plexiglass fixtures with stainless-steel strips crown the ceiling with soft, golden light. “When designing it, I had Piero Portaluppi’s Villa Necchi Campiglio in Milan in mind,” Guénaire says. The design is reflected in the partially mirrored built-in shelving unit, in front of which stands a bean-shaped coffee table of Guénaire’s own design. The organic, gray-marble surface is framed with smoked pear wood. “In the 1920s, there was a trend to frame everything,” Guénaire says. He also designed a double-leaf door, made from striped ribbed glass and metal that resembles intricate marquetry. It leads from the living room to the bedroom, where the same door surprises once again. Seen from its other side, it’s made of burl wood, “which has been used for furniture at least since the 16th century,” notes Guénaire.

Schlafzimmer schimmernder Bettüberwurf Materialmix

In the bedroom, the mix of materials and eras reaches a peak.

Schlafzimmer abgerundete Lacknachttische Wandverkleidung aus weißem Wildleder schimmernder Bettüberwurf

The rounded lacquered nightstands with push-to-open drawers and gleaming, curved, chrome accents were designed by Guénaire. The wall paneling is white suede and the bedspread is by Jules & Jim Paris.

Though the apartment now appears clean, sleek, and sensual, its final design wasn’t a foregone conclusion during the decision-making process. When Guénaire first proposed the material palette and an oak floor to the residents, they weren’t especially enthusiastic. But he managed to win them over: “My mother was a teacher; maybe that’s why I enjoy debating so much,” he says with a laugh. “Today, the couple loves the wood accents.” The bedroom’s built-in shelves are also made of burl wood, and are flanked by masks from Mexico, panels from Papua New Guinea, and African-inspired vases from the Parisian galleries Romain Morandi and Lucas Ratton. The latter gallery is also the source of the Polynesian ceremonial paddle from the late 19th century and a traditional wooden club from Tonga from the early 20th century.

Back in the living room, design accessories and art objects abound too: Both Jean Gabriel Chauvin’s Graine Ardente (Galerie Maison Rapin) and a 19th-century sculpture made of wood, pigments, and shells from the Solomon Islands are on display in the built-in shelf. Paris-based design studio Garnier & Linker designed both a wooden-and-metal vase, and the rectangular yellow-crystal piece on the coffee table by Guénaire. This butter-hued piece is just one way the designer incorporated a few pastel accents for his clients—but the pink and sky-blue onyx in the bathrooms are the definite standout. Here, the gem-like material becomes an innovative way to reinterpret the clients’ initial request for Art Deco, sun-bleached Miami Vice vibes.

Weiße Einbauten Sekretär aus amerikanischer Kirsche Louise Roes „Loft Lamp“ aus Metall mit Marmorsockel Philippe Starck...

In the guest room, white, partially rounded built-in elements are paired with a writing desk made of American cherry wood, which also serves as a headboard. Louise Roe’s Loft lamp matches Philippe Starck’s aluminum Romantica chair, which adds a touch of 1980s flair.

Onyxwaschbecken

The onyx sink in the principal bathroom, which Guénaire says “reminds him of a blue lagoon in the Maldives.”

Rosafarbener Onyx im Badezimmer Badewanne

The pink onyx in the daughters’ bathroom—which serves as a shelf and a practical step up to the sink for the younger one—has an even more delicate look.

This Paris penthouse was originally published in AD Germany.

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