Culture Aesop clads London store with tactile bars of soap - Least wasteful use of their shitty overpriced soap

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Skincare brand Aesop has opened a minimalist store in London's Knightsbridge, featuring a "soap corridor" created with uniform tiles made from the everyday bathroom product.

Set within a slim and narrow room on Brompton Road, the Aesop outlet is characterised by a floor-to-ceiling installation made of cream-coloured soap bars.
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Aesop has opened a store in London's Knightsbridge

The installation, created by architect Nicolas Schuybroek, was transferred from an Aesop store in Milan, where it was temporarily on display for the city's design week in April. Slabs of soap were arranged in a gridded layout and supported by a subtle timber structure, designed to be disassembled and installed at different locations.

"Schuybroek had taken one of the most fundamental, functional household items – a bar of soap – to create an unconventional sculpture," reflected Aesop.

According to the skincare brand, the architect was informed by the simplicity of Arte Povera – an Italian art movement from the 1960s to the 1970s that favoured using unconventional everyday materials instead of more traditional ones such as oil paint or carved marble.

"Just as practitioners of the Arte Povera movement restricted themselves to simple and everyday materials in their poetic compositions, the spatial restriction of the store enforces a streamlined design in the form of a soap corridor," said Aesop.

As per every Aesop branch, the store includes a central basin for skin consultations. At the Knightsbridge store, every piece of furniture was repurposed from the Aesop furniture collection, including the basin and the grey geometric display shelving.

In one corner of the room, more bars of soap were piled into a sculptural heap, adding a playful touch to the otherwise "muted calm" of the interior.

The skincare brand explained that Schuybroek's installation is intended to travel to numerous Aesop stores, with Brompton Road being its second home.
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The installation was previously on display during Milan design week in April

Known for its varied store designs that often reference their specific locations, Aesop has nearly 400 outlets around the world.

These include a brick-clad branch in Copenhagen that pays homage to the nearby Louisiana Museum of Modern Art and an open-sided shop in Seoul that was informed by traditional Korean pavilions.

The photography is by Alixe Lay.
 
is this a subtle anti jeet thing? or a solution to them being so filthy? if you cant get them to wash the poo off their hands with soap then just make every surface out of soap.

No this is to repel the jeet.
 
Soap isn't really a good building material. What would happen if someone leaned on it? What would happen if someone sneezed on it? How would you clean it without destroying it?
Age old question of when I drop the soap on the floor is the floor dirty or is it clean, or is the soap still clean or dirty.
 
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Age old question of when I drop the soap on the floor is the floor dirty or is it clean, or is the soap still clean or dirty.
It's more like a temperature transfer thing. If you put hot tea into cold milk, the milk ends up warmer but the tea is cooler. Likewise, if I take a shit, jump in the shower afterwards, and jam the soap bar into my asscrack, that area is now clean (after a rinse, of course) while soap bar is now brown.
 
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