RH has opened RH London, with the RH London Mayfair gallery unveiling five floors of architecture, design, dining and hospitality within one of the few surviving Palladian mansions in 18th-century London. Originally built in 1723 as Queensberry House and later home to the Bank of England, the landmark was designed by architect Giacomo Leoni and reimagined by Anouska Hempel and Foster + Partners.
The gallery features an Architecture & Design Library anchored by a rare 1521 edition of Vitruvius' De Architectura, a scenic glass lift framed in champagne gold, and two dining destinations. The Dining Room occupies the historic banking hall, while The Perch by Anouska Hempel offers a rooftop garden.
RH shows how historic architecture can be reimagined as an immersive retail destination that blends design, hospitality and cultural storytelling.
Historic Retail Gallery Openings
RH Opened Its Five-Level Mayfair Gallery in a Palladian Mansion
Trend Themes
-
Heritage Retail Destinations — Historic landmarks are becoming immersive brand environments where preservation, commerce, and cultural storytelling create differentiated luxury experiences.
-
Hospitality-led Showrooms — Dining, rooftop gardens, and lounge-style amenities are reshaping retail galleries into longer-stay destinations with stronger emotional engagement.
-
Architectural Brand Storytelling — Curated design libraries, rare artifacts, and restored interiors give retailers new ways to transform physical spaces into cultural platforms.
Industry Implications
-
Luxury Retail — Premium brands can use landmark spaces to elevate product discovery through experiential environments that feel closer to cultural institutions than traditional stores.
-
Interior Design — The blending of furniture, architecture, and hospitality reveals new commercial models where design inspiration is embedded directly into shoppable settings.
-
Commercial Real Estate — Adaptive reuse of historic properties offers differentiated leasing and destination value as retail tenants seek spaces with built-in narrative and prestige.