Norman Foster’s sketch of iconic Yacht Club lands on Monacqua’s latest bottles

A hand-drawn sketch by Norman Foster — the architect’s own original drawing of the Yacht Club de Monaco, one of the most architecturally significant buildings the Principality has ever commissioned — is now on the shelves across Monaco, printed on the latest limited-edition bottles from local water brand Monacqua.

The collaboration was unveiled on Thursday 9th April at the Yacht Club de Monaco itself, in the presence of Princess Alexandra of Hanover. For Monacqua founder Geeta Kalwani, the moment was almost overwhelming. “To be launching this bottle in the actual Yacht Club, where this image was conceived, supported by the mind that actually conceived of the Yacht Club — I am incredibly proud,” she says.

The bottles are available across both glass and carton formats at standard retail pricing — a deliberate decision by Monacqua founder Geeta Kalwani to make the collaboration accessible to everyone, not just collectors.

Photo credit: Cassandra Tanti

An architect who shaped Monaco’s identity

Norman Foster’s relationship with Monaco is one of the most consequential architectural partnerships the Principality has known. Completed in 2014, the Yacht Club de Monaco transformed the harbour front and redefined Monaco’s relationship with the sea — a building so rooted in its setting that it has come to feel less like an addition to Monaco and more like an expression of what the Principality aspires to be. Praised internationally as a landmark of sustainable high-tech design, it cemented Foster’s place as one of the defining architectural voices in Monaco’s modern history, alongside a body of work across the Principality that spans more than two decades.

Foster himself is among the most decorated architects alive. A Pritzker Prize laureate, a holder of the Order of Merit — one of the most exclusive honours in the world, restricted to just 24 living recipients and awarded solely at the personal discretion of the Sovereign, his buildings define skylines across continents: the Gherkin and Millennium Bridge in London, the Hearst Tower in New York, Apple Park in Cupertino.

That a three-year-old Monaco water brand now carries his hand-drawn work is, by any measure, a remarkable thing.

“There is something very personal about a hand-drawn image, a closeness to the mind at work,” says Kalwani. “I particularly love the subject, as it speaks to the meeting of two things I hold dear: the sea and sustainability.”

Photo credit: Cassandra Tanti

A sketch, a Prince and an unexpected discovery

When the Yacht Club was completed, Foster presented Prince Albert II with a personal gift: the original sketch — the hand-drawn image that first imagined the building into existence. It is that same drawing that now appears on Monacqua’s bottles.

Kalwani did not know this when the collaboration began. She discovered it only when the bottles were presented to the Prince — a detail that gave the project a resonance it had not been designed to carry, and that speaks to how deeply Foster’s vision is woven into the fabric of Monaco.

Prince Albert II wrote to Kalwani ahead of the launch, expressing his conviction that the collaboration would further Monacqua’s commitment to Monaco’s cultural influence.

Culture in a bottle

At the heart of Monacqua is a belief that everyday life can be touched by joy when it is infused with art, design and culture — and that this should not be the preserve of collectors or gallery-goers. It is a philosophy that has shaped the brand’s decision to collaborate with some of the world’s most significant cultural figures, beginning with artist George Condo in 2025 and now with one of the defining architects of our time. By bringing Foster’s work onto a bottle that sits on a café table or a supermarket shelf, Monacqua is making the luxury of culture genuinely accessible.

Photo credit: Cassandra Tanti

The brand behind the bottle

Monacqua is three years old, founded in Monaco by Geeta Kalwani — a mother of three with a double master’s degree from Sciences-Po Paris and the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore, who has lived across a dozen countries and speaks eight languages. The brand began, she says, because she wanted pure water for her children, free from toxins. What she built is considerably more than that.

The water is sourced from two ancient European springs — one in Germany, one in Italy — both traceable to Roman times and certified free from nitrates, arsenic and contamination. It is sold in glass and carton formats, with the cartons 75% biodegradable and fully recyclable through Monaco’s yellow bin system. The brand is on track to sell approximately one million bottles annually, each one, as Kalwani puts it, a plastic bottle that was never made.

Monacqua also carries a formal partnership with the Princess Grace Foundation, contributing annually to support families of seriously ill children in paediatric hospitals in France. Last year those donations amounted to €10,000. A portion of every bottle sold goes directly to the Foundation.

Monacqua is proudly and deliberately local — born in Monaco, for Monaco, now accepting payment through Carlo, the Principality’s own digital currency.

Competing as a small independent against the giants of the bottled water industry is not without its challenges, but Kalwani is clear-eyed about what has driven the brand’s growth. “When I launched the business I was not thinking of necessarily making it profitable — I just wanted a good solution for the market, my children and the local community, because I just wasn’t happy with the plastic bottles around.

“But slowly the volume grew, and that’s thanks to the people themselves. The market has loved us, and the people are more powerful than anything else. We are here with a purpose — to have pure water, well packaged, and spread the word of culture. But I could not have been here without the support of the people.”

The papal seal of approval

The most striking testament to the brand’s standing in Monaco came not through a commercial decision but through one it knew nothing about. On 28th March 2026, during the historic visit of Pope Leo XIV — the first papal visit to Monaco in five centuries — the Monegasque government quietly chose Monacqua to provide water for the 15,000 people who attended the mass at the Stade Louis II. Kalwani found out only afterwards, when friends and clients began sending her photographs of the bottles in the crowd.

“We were numb with joy,” she says.

Auction specialist Simon de Pury perhaps said it best: “In less than two years, and in no small part thanks to its stellar artist collaborations, Monacqua has already attained cult status. It took Château Mouton Rothschild a little longer.”

The Norman Foster x Monacqua limited-edition bottles are available now across cafés, restaurants and supermarkets in Monaco.

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All photos by Cassandra Tanti