
Liaigre Extends Its Sydney Residency at The Lands by Capella
The Parisian interiors house brings its restrained vision of luxury to Sydney for another month.
For four decades, Liaigre has practised a form of luxury that rarely raises its voice.
Now, the Parisian design house is bringing that sensibility to Sydney, where its temporary residency at The Lands by Capella has proven successful enough to extend through June 15. Set within the grand sandstone interiors of the historic Lands Building, the presentation feels less like a showroom than a quietly inhabited apartment—the sort of place where every object appears considered, and nothing competes unnecessarily for attention.
Founded in Paris in 1985 by Christian Liaigre, the house built its reputation on a disciplined form of luxury: clean lines, noble materials and interiors that favour proportion and atmosphere over decorative excess. Long before “quiet luxury” became a marketing catchphrase, Liaigre was already practising a more exacting version of it.

That philosophy has found an increasingly receptive audience in Australia, where contemporary architecture has similarly gravitated toward natural materials, softened minimalism and a more relaxed take on sophistication. The Sydney installation, conceived by Studio Liaigre in Paris, leans into that affinity. A sequence of residential spaces—entrance hall, living room, library and dining area—unfolds through the building with an ease that mirrors the city itself: cosmopolitan, but rarely overworked.
Alongside signature pieces such as the Pantaleria sofa, Spencer armchairs and Phocée table, the exhibition also introduces newer works, including the Bloc bookcase by Dominique Perrault and Gaëlle Lauriot-Prévost, as well as recent lighting designs such as the Sélène floor lamp and Odeo lamp.

Importantly, the presentation avoids feeling like an international luxury concept simply transplanted into Sydney. The integration of First Nations artworks, curated in partnership with Melbourne-based D’Lan Contemporary, broadens the conversation beyond furniture and into a more layered exchange between French and Australian ideas of craftsmanship, materiality and living well.
In a city not short on luxury branding exercises, Liaigre’s residency succeeds precisely because it rarely feels like one. The result is quieter, more assured and ultimately more convincing—an environment that understands restraint can still leave a lasting impression.
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