Claus Porto

Portuguese studio João Mendes Ribeiro designed an inclusive, elegant and cosmopolitan shop in Lisbon, that enhances and complements Claus Porto’s strong identity.

Claus Porto is a portuguese scents brand whose 130 years history had to be summoned in the project of the first flagship store to open in Lisbon downtown. Towards the visual impact that the Claus products have, the store design would have to be minimalist but very sensitive, so that it could enhance and complement the brand’s strong identity. It should be an inclusive, elegant and cosmopolitan place, but also a place with a strong sensory appeal.

João Mendes Ribeiro, Claus Porto, Lisbon, 2016
João Mendes Ribeiro, Claus Porto, Lisbon, 2016
João Mendes Ribeiro, Claus Porto, Lisbon, 2016
João Mendes Ribeiro, Claus Porto, Lisbon, 2016
João Mendes Ribeiro, Claus Porto, Lisbon, 2016
João Mendes Ribeiro, Claus Porto, plans
João Mendes Ribeiro, Claus Porto, sections
João Mendes Ribeiro, Claus Porto, axonometric view

  The interior of the preexistent store consisted of two different rooms at different heights, united by a staircase, both accessible by the exterior, with entrances in two different streets. The room in Rua da Misericórdia was, for many years, used as a pharmacy, from which it inherited the wooden display cabinets that cover all the walls and the plaster ceilings adorned with geometrical and vegetable motifs. The proposal for this space was mostly based on the preservation and restoration of the existing structures, trying to enrich the preexistence and adapt it to its new circumstances. In the middle of the room, one single piece marks the intervention and defines the entire space: a polished brass counter that reflects the surroundings, allowing a fluid circulation and a free use of the space around it.

João Mendes Ribeiro, Claus Porto, Lisbon, 2016

The marble staircase leads to the room in the lower floor, facing Rua das Gáveas. This second room includes a barber shop, a custom counseling space, an archive and a lounge area. The entire room is circled by a thin perimetral brass inlay that defines, inside the walls, a linear niche where products can be shown. Below this line, different types of archive cabinets define the space: a large drawer cabinet made in old riga wood, a continuous drawer in the barber area and, in the opposite wall, under an installation by Joana Astolfi, a flexible archive cabinet that supports and defines the lounge space.

João Mendes Ribeiro, Claus Porto, Lisbon, 2016


Claus Porto, Lisbon
Program: barber shop
Architect: João Mendes Ribeiro
Design team: Catarina Fortuna, Joana Brandão, Ana Maria Feijão, Filipe Catarino, Pedro Teixeira
Art Installation and window display: Joana Astolfi
Art Direction: Anne-Margreet Honing
Engineering: Raul Serafim & Associados
Contractor: Cosmaral
Area: 85 sqm
Completion: 2016