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horaires:

Du lundi au samedi de 10h à 19h


adresse:

111 boulevard Beaumarchais

75011 Paris


tel: + 33 1 42 77 00 33


site: www.merci-merci.com

plan: www.mappy.fr

Merci is a word we don’t hear often enough. We don’t say it often enough perhaps. It’s also a great coup of publicity and a great name for a non-profit shop which opened last summer on the Bvd Beaumarchais, a stone-throw from the über-trendy streets of le Marais in Paris. Whoever thought of it first is a very inspired thinker.

But once inside, it has less to do with your local charity shop than with a carefully designed concept store, with items presented to look like unique pieces and indeed some of them might be, with the accordingly high price-tag. The profits raised go essentially to poor children in Madagascar, but the pieces sold are usually from high end designers, who can choose to create new pieces for the shop and drop their profit margins to zero. A new idea in the retail environment. Non-profit driven, all before the big financial mayhem. The force behind the concept store is  the couple who created the children’s fashion brand Bonpoint, and later sold it.

Again Bonpoint was founded before the craze in children’s fashion even existed (now see ‘milk’ magazine), so can we presume of the future offsprings of the Merci store?

If I liked the ‘arts de la table’ section with some reasonably-prices glasses and plates, I was still searching the vast building for a second-hand selection of goods... which I think could be extended. There is of course this second-hand bookshop/library/teashop, but don’t expect to find a seat and find the book you’re looking for. The first are scarce and the later are in random order on the shelves, for lucky finds and browsing.

Then there is this book I didn’t know Pennac had written, presented in a huge column : Merci.

This one you will find in great quantity and new.

If you’re looking for their website, note, www.merci.com is for sweets and chocolates ! surprise, the brand name is nothing new then... and the concept store had to go for www.merci-merci.com