Lifestyle Roundup: 7 Stories Shaping Luxury, Design, and Culture This Week

From haute horlogerie in Geneva to a megayacht christened on the Dutch coast, here are seven stories shaping the world of luxury, design, and culture this week.


πŸ•°οΈ Luxury β€” Watches and Wonders 2026 Stuns Geneva

Source: Robb Report

Watches and Wonders Geneva 2026 Salon

Photo: Watches and Wonders Geneva 2026

Watches and Wonders 2026 delivered one of the most exciting editions in years. With 65 exhibiting brands, the largest gathering ever in Geneva, standout pieces include Parmigiani Fleurier‘s Tonda FF Chronograph MystΓ©rieux with its seemingly floating movement, Vacheron Constantin‘s ultra-thin Overseas Self-Winding, and A. Lange & SΓΆhne‘s Lange 1 Tourbillon Lumen β€” a watch that glows in the dark to reveal its intricate mechanics. Adding fuel to collector frenzy, Rolex officially discontinued its iconic GMT-Master II “Pepsi” (Ref. 126710BLRO), sending secondary-market prices surging overnight.


🍽️ Food β€” Sotheby’s Opens “Marcel” Inside NYC’s Breuer Building

Source: Sotheby’s

The Breuer Building exterior, home to Marcel restaurant at Sotheby's

The Breuer Building, home to Marcel. Photo: Max Touhey via Sotheby’s

Auction house Sotheby’s has opened Marcel, a fine-dining restaurant inside the landmark Breuer Building on Madison Avenue. Brought to life by Robin and Stephen Alesch of Roman and Williams, the space features walnut-paneled walls, warm candlelight, and dusty cocoa-hued mohair banquettes nodding to Upper East Side refinement circa 1966. Chef-partner Marie-Aude Rose delivers continental cuisine with a French emphasis β€” from classic confit de canard to gratin de cabillaud and lobster with roasted pineapple. The dining room will feature rotating Sotheby’s masterworks on the walls, all for sale, while a reimagined sculpture garden serves meals among trees and outdoor art.


πŸ›οΈ Architecture β€” BIG Reveals Nashville Arts Center Wrapped in Aluminium Pipes

Source: Dezeen

BIG TPAC Nashville performing arts center

Photo: Bloomimages via Dezeen

BIG (Bjarke Ingels Group) has unveiled the design for Nashville’s new Tennessee Performing Arts Center (TPAC). The riverside structure is wrapped in a massive curtain of bundled aluminium tubes β€” “like organ pipes,” says Ingels β€” that undulate from vertical to horizontal, creating canopies and openings. Two performance halls are angled apart and stepped down toward the Cumberland River, with a cascading atrium lobby between them. Inside the Broadway Theater, audience boxes are described as “floating wood-clad trays.” The project cements Nashville’s rising status as a cultural capital of the American South.


🏠 Interior β€” Charlap Hyman & Herrero Creates a “Place of Pause” in NYC

Source: Dezeen

Nonfiction NYC by Charlap Hyman and Herrero

Photo: Sean Davidson via Dezeen

New York studio Charlap Hyman & Herrero has designed a retail space for Seoul-born fragrance brand Nonfiction on the Lower East Side’s Orchard Street. Glossy oxblood-tiled floors contrast lime-washed walls and minimalist metal shelving. A long Queen Anne-style mahogany table by Doug McCollough runs through the centre, while an original circa-1770 candle stand sits alongside. A niche lined with hand-painted black rose tiles by artist Pilar Almon serves as the testing area. A floor-to-ceiling mirrored column emits deep amber light. The studio describes the result as “a place of pause β€” a space to slow down, reset and reconnect.”


✈️ Travel β€” A 1936 Geisha Theater in Kyoto Becomes Japan’s Most Exciting New Hotel

Source: Travel + Leisure

Imperial Hotel Kyoto exterior

Photo: Imperial Hotel via Travel + Leisure

The Imperial Hotel, Kyoto has reopened the historic Yasaka Kaikan theater β€” originally financed by Gion’s geisha community in 1936 β€” as a 55-room luxury hotel. Architect Tomoyuki Sakakida preserved the building’s exterior, inspecting original tiles one by one (about 10% survive). The 100-foot-tall structure, exempt from Kyoto’s current 40-foot height restriction, offers unobstructed views of Gion’s tea houses. Highlights include Ren, a 10-seat counter restaurant serving French-inflected Kyoto ingredients; a cave-like underground spa pool flanked by 1.5-ton boulders from Shikoku Island; and a rooftop bar. Nightly rates start at approximately $1,075.


β›΅ Yacht β€” Feadship Launches 262-Foot “Thalassa” With Record-Breaking Beach Club

Source: Boat International

Feadship Project 826 Thalassa superyacht

Photo: Feadship via Boat International

Dutch shipyard Feadship has launched Project 826, named Thalassa β€” an 80-metre (262-foot) megayacht featuring the largest beach club ever built on a Feadship at 165 square metres across two levels. Designed by Malcolm McKeon Yacht Design with interiors by m2atelier, the vessel draws inspiration from sailing yachts with a sharp plumb bow and graceful, low-slung profile. Other highlights include a 6.4-metre glass-bottom pool illuminating the beach club below, a convertible helipad/pickleball court, fold-out terraces over the water, and teak-covered hatches with innovative new gears. “McKeon’s brief challenged us in the best possible way,” said Feadship director Jan-Bart Verkuyl.


πŸ‘— Fashion β€” Kering Unveils “ReconKering” Plan to Reignite Gucci

Source: Kering

Kering Capital Markets Day 2026 Florence

Photo: Kering

French luxury conglomerate Kering unveiled its new strategic plan “ReconKering” at its Capital Markets Day in Florence on April 16, aiming to more than double its full-year 2025 recurring operating margin and restore Gucci to its former dominance. Led by CEO Luca de Meo, the three-phase plan β€” Reset (2026), Rebuild (2028), Reclaim (2030) β€” targets ROCE above 20% mid-term. The group also announced a strategic partnership with Chinese luxury brand ICICLE (ICCF), a joint venture with Italian manufacturer HModa, and plans for luxury smart eyewear in partnership with Google. The transformation comes as Kering houses β€” including Saint Laurent, Bottega Veneta, and Balenciaga β€” each receive distinct growth strategies.


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