The future of furniture design, Christophe Vasseur’s La Table and Upstate New York’s renaissance.
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Friday 16/1/26
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London
Paris
Zürich
Milan
Bangkok
Tokyo
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Good morning. Today, our team is in the French capital exploring the best of Paris Dećo Off. Visit monocle.com or tune in to Monocle Radio for more. Here’s what’s coming up in today’s Monocle Minute:
THE OPINION: ‘Lawless’ London? The stats don’t stack up DESIGN: The future for furniture at Maison&Objet DAILY TREAT: Break bread at Christophe Vasseur’s La Table FROM MONOCLE.COM: Upstate New York’s renaissance
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‘Lawless London’ is suffering an unusual crimewave – one that never actually happened
By Josh Fehnert
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Wherever you look, from social-media snippets to politicians’ soundbites, the story is the same: London is done for. On its arse economically, socially divided and battered by a crimewave of unendurable brutality, the UK capital is written off as a fast-falling hellscape. Residents inhabiting this version of reality, we’re told, are more likely to have their bike stolen than be offered a cheery “hello”.
Well, perhaps the last part is true – it’s not always the friendliest – but most accounts of the city’s demise have been grossly exaggerated and the case against this misinformation is mounting fast. Even bike thefts have dropped by some 30 per cent over the past 15 years. London’s inbound tourist numbers and spending rose 4 per cent and 6 per cent respectively in the year to October 2025. Last year the capital gained 93,000 residents according to the Office for National Statistics and there’s increasing evidence to suggest that the abandonment of the UK by the tax-fearing wealthy (“Wexit”) is, at best, overstated.
This week the Metropolitan Police confirmed murders to be at a decade-long low in London (a rate five times lower than Los Angeles and half that of New York) and safer than Berlin, Paris and Milan. It’s better than Brussels for goodness sake (an argument that I’d say goes well beyond the murder rate). So why doesn’t it feel as though things are improving?
London has never been popular with the rest of the country but it’s not just homegrown grumblers or headbangers such as the Reform UK leader, Nigel Farage, doing it down. The US president, Donald Trump, found time to dub it a “warzone” and fret about the imminent imposition of Sharia law. That (bullshit) narrative hasn’t been helped by a rise in malicious social-media posts and AI-generated twaddle. Deeply suspect screeds, scant on detail but full of scorn for an imagined lawlessness, rose from the hundreds in 2013 to a peak of about 15,000 last year, according to new analysis by King’s College London.
Out of the blue: Farage’s hands-off approach to the truth and claims that London is ‘in the grip of a crimewave’ don't match the facts
Whether the capital is to your taste as a place to live and do business or not, it’s important to distinguish between real life and out-of-context online rubbish. So, here goes: violent crime is falling and already proportionately lower than any other UK city. Despite the headlines about knife crime, NHS data says that hospital admissions for stab wounds are at historic lows. Assaults have halved since 2000, even as the population has boomed. Abhorrent crimes against women and girls rightly make headlines when they happen but, hearteningly, the best, most serious long-term study suggests that women report feeling increasingly safe – a trend consistent over the past three decades. Air quality is up, road deaths are down and that’s before we risk naming some of the city’s pulls: opportunity, world-leading art, culture, science, history, hospitality, education and media.
Of course, the truth – as in any democratic, liberal city of a certain size – is messy and imperfect and there are issues: a rise in phone-snatching and petty shoplifting among them. There’s much still to fix in the city, from housing to the high street, but the story of London’s failure is wrong by most measures. Seeing nearly 10 million people getting on with precious little of the drama depicted online isn’t entertaining – it doesn’t serve the nonsense nativist narratives of decline – but at least it’s true. Winter can be gloomy but to understand what’s really wrong we can’t let bots, bigots and misinformation make the weather.
Josh Fehnert is Monocle’s editor. For more opinion, analysis and insight, subscribe to Monocle today.
Keen to see London’s best bits and what keeps the UK capital great despite the naysayers? Our City Guide – available exclusively to subscribers – is brimming with top tips and recommendations.
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HITACHI ENERGY MONOCLE
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design: france
Finding a way forward for furniture at Maison&Objet
There’s a festival-like atmosphere at Parc des Expositions de Paris Nord Villepinte, where furniture and homewares trade fair Maison&Objet is in full swing until Monday (writes Nic Monisse). Some 60,000 visitors and 2,300 brands are packing the halls in Paris, with interior designers, architects and developers lugging carry-on-size suitcases packed with samples for furnishing any kind of space, ranging from coat hangers (check out Italy’s Toscanini) and kitchen hardware to innovative new building products such as Microcrete, a make of environmentally friendly concrete from Portugal. There are, of course, major furniture brands too: Italian brand Ethimo is launching its new range of outdoor seating and Cesena-based Technogym is showing a sleek new pilates reformer.
Objects of desire: Pieces from Moser and the fair ambience
But far from simply being a place to present new items, the event has also tasked brands to consider its theme, Past Reveals Future. “The theme perfectly reflects Fermob’s DNA,” says the French furniture brand’s president, Bernard Reybier. “We regularly revisit iconic references and reinterpret them. Our Parisienne 21 chairs recall classic bistro seats whose original patent dates back to the same year as the Eiffel Tower. Nothing is ever completely new but everything can be reinvented.” For a furniture sector that has, in recent years, been challenged by global supply-chain disruptions, volatile production costs and evolving consumer expectations around sustainable production, it’s a reminder that the industry has always found a way to reinvent itself and chart a path forward.
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• • • • • DAILY TREAT • • • • •
Break bread at Christophe Vasseur’s La Table
When Christophe Vasseur opened bakery Du Pain et des Idées in 2002 in Paris’s Canal Saint-Martin, the l’escargot pistache, a flaky pistachio swirl with a hint of chocolate, quickly attracted a steady stream of well-heeled locals.
Ardent followers of Vasseur’s culinary savoir-faire can now take a seat at his nextdoor restaurant, La Table. Dishes include everything from savoury brioche and vegetable pies to pizzas with beetroot, hazelnut and burrata. A glass of natural orange wine from Piedmont also goes down a treat. dupainetdesidees.com
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Sponsored by Hitachi Energy
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FROM MONOCLE.COM: usa
Upstate New York is having a renaissance. Here’s where to eat, shop and stay on your next trip
Upstate New York has quietly become the state’s hottest area, luring city-dwellers north in numbers that would have seemed unthinkable a decade ago (writes Mary Holland). Once a sleepy agricultural region with a smattering of farms and quaint towns, the area was formerly earmarked for weekend getaways from the city. Speckled with holiday homes, few lived here full-time.
Back to basics: Taavo Somer and Erin Winters and Little Goat interior
As remote-working options have increased over the past few years, the open spaces of the Hudson Valley have seen an influx of approximately 80,000 New York residents between 2019 and 2021, and urbanites continue to decamp north. Local entrepreneur Erin Winters and her business partner, Taavo Somer, are behind some of the region’s most inviting hospitality spots. “The area has changed dramatically,” says Winters, with her establishments having no small part to play in its transformation.
From boutique retailers and cosy cafés to charming countryside inns, a slate of new openings is bringing city-dwellers back to the Hudson Valley. Fancy a break? Click here to read more.
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