New Stores
Transcription
New Stores
New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 1 of 16 New York retail update: new stores ALAINA WONG & CLAIRE HAMILTON, WGSN 30.01.07 Boutiques & chains Menswear Kidswear Boutiques & chains Ekovaruhuset Swedish boutique Ekovaruhuset is only two months old and a sister store to its flagship in Stockholm. This small box of a store sells only "organic and fair made" clothing and accessories with a focus on "really beautiful design and a lot of local stuff and crochet/knit pieces", as well as international designers. Three As Four is creating some exclusive items for the store. Contact information Ekovaruhuset 123 Ludlow Tel: +1 212 673 1753 ekovaruhuset.se/newyor... Honey In The Rough 161 Rivington Tel: +1 212 228 6415 www.honeyintherough.com Intermix 1003 Madison Avenue Tel: +1 212 249 7858 www.intermixonline.com Issey Miyake 802 Madison Avenue www.isseymiyake.com Juicy Couture 368 Bleecker Tel: +1 646 336 8151 www.juicycouture.com Leontine 226 Front Street Tel: +1 212 766 1066 25 W. 14th Street Tel: +1 212 242 2128 www.levisstore.com Max Azria 409 West Broadway Tel: +1 212 991 4740 www.bcbg.com Mulberry 605 Madison Avenue Tel: +1 888 685 6856 ext. 102 www.mulberry.com Intermix Facing competition from its arch-rival Scoop, independent boutique chain Intermix plans to triple the size of its Madison Avenue flagship to 5,000sq ft. The chain was founded by two brothers from Beirut, Haro and Khajak Keledjian, who pioneered the contemporary boutique chain concept in the mid-90s. Khajak explained that the point of difference for Intermix stores is: "If you walk into an Intermix store, in 10 minutes you'll get an overall idea of what the trends, the colours and the styling looks of a season are all together. It's a much easier concept than having a basic product category store." Mulberry 387 Bleecker Street Tel: +1 888 685 6856 ext. 101 Paul Smith 142 Greene Street Tel: +1 646 613 3060 www.paulsmith.co.uk Project No. 8 138 Division Street between Orchard & Ludlow Tel: +1 212 925 5599 http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 2 of 16 www.ProjectNo8.com Intermix houses designer and private labels such as Citizens of Humanity skinny jeans, Diane Von Furstenberg print dresses, Theory sweaters, Michael Kors espadrilles and Matthew Williamson. There are Puma 33 Union Square West five stores in New York. Tel: +1 212 206 7761 www.puma.com Samantha Thavasa 965 Madison Avenue Tel: +1 800 717 7132 www.samantha.co.jp Shvitz NYC 128 Thompson Street Tel: +1 212 982 9465 www.schvitznyc.com Té Casan 382 West Broadway www.tescasan.com Theory 38 Gasenvort Street Tel: +1 212 524 6790 www.theory.com Trina Turk 67 Gansenvort Street Tel: +1 212 206 7383 www.trinaturk.com True Religion 132 Prince Street Tel: +1 212 966 6011 www.truereligionbrandj... Issey Miyake The newly refurbished shop on Madison Avenue, between 67th and 68th Streets, replaces the old premises at 902 Madison Avenue. Since June 2006 the store size has increased from 1,800sq ft to 2,600sq ft. Valley 48 Orchard Street (between Grand & Hester Street) Tel: +1 212 274 8985 Walls are white, floors are concrete, and a black-and-white checkerboard is created using hung lights to break up the black ceiling. Uniqlo 546 Broadway www.uniqlo.com The only splash of colour comes from the visual merchandising, for which Gordon Kipping from design agency G Tects was responsible. The store houses Miyake's men's, women's, ME and Fete collections. Related reports Max Azria Té Casan Puma Mulberry Shvitz Uniqlo Juicy Couture Major US luxe leisure brand has been on a US retail roll-out spree, now http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 3 of 16 that the brand is owned by Liz Claiborne. First opening earlier this year on 5th Avenue and Madison Avenues, and just recently in December, on Bleecker Street, this new flagship location is the brand's third largest store in New York. The new brand-lifestyle store is 3,500sq ft and houses apparel and accessories for women, men, children and pets, as well as the Couture Couture jewellery range and its new baby line, Juicy Baby. What used to be a former private club is now a two-level retail space with a winding staircase. The basement has three rooms with its own cash register and dressing rooms. The biggest area is for women's apparel and is decorated with kitschy decorations, such as gigantic birdcages and sweet jars. Co-founder Pamela Skaist-Levy told WWD: "We love the location of our Bleecker Street shop. It's on two levels, so our customer can wander through the world of Juicy with each room having its own intimate feeling." Juicy expects to open in Beverly Hills September 2007. Leontine Déjà vu? Not quite, but you may recognise some of shop owner and designer Kyung Lee's flair in her new boutique Leontine from her other two boutiques, Albertine and Claudine of the West Village. Named after the sisters in the film Bonjour Tristesse, the newest addition sells a well-edited assortment of vintage and contemporary clothing, jewellery, fragrances and home accessories, all of which are thoroughly Parisian. http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 4 of 16 Levi's Levi's has launched a brand new retail concept in a new flagship location near Union Square, making it the best location in New York City for the full selection of Levi Jeans. The 2,000sq ft store is designed as a series of mini shops within a shop to provide customers with easy accessibility to all of its Levi's brands, including its newest ranges such as the premium Levi's Capital E and Levi's Red. Other lines available are Levi's Red Tab and the original Vintage Levi's. With a new head of retail operations in the US, the company has a new focus on retail. Vice president Diane Padoven said that "since Levi's jeanswear is considered the most innovative in the world, the design of the Union Square store was to keep the shopper in mind to focus on what has made Levi's famous for the past century. The innovative merchandising provides customers with a user-friendly and fun shopping experience." WGSN loved the changing rooms, where "flip-over" service indicators on doors to tell staff if a customer needs help. The changing room walls are plastered with original "thank you" letters and testimonials from past customers. http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 5 of 16 Max Azria Set in SoHo, the new higher-end 875sq ft Max Azria boutique is cosy and artistic. Following from the company's expansion and focusing on his eponymous designer line the new store on West Broadway joins another flaghip on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles. Jewellery is set alongside books on Federico Fellini and Gustav Klimt. Three imitation tree trunks stretch from floor to ceiling, and the décor is finished off with hemp rugs and cloud prints in the dressing rooms. Azria told WGSN: "The store design is meant to reflect this synergy between old and new, soft and sleek… it is the artist's canvas and the clothes are the paint." Mulberry Mulberry's first boutique in Manhattan was on Bleecker Street and houses men's and women's merchandise, handbags, luggage, small leather goods, gloves, scarves and stationery items such as notebooks and organisers. While the 530sq ft Bleecker Street branch is "targeting a cool downtown girl", its second standalone store launch in the US was a bigger flagship on Madison Avenue between 57th and 58th streets, which "adopts the interior design of its Bond Street, London shop" according to a company statement. Lisa Montague, chief executive officer, told WGSN: "We need to consider different customer groups. All the stores will still have the Mulberry aesthetic, but we recognise that there are unique needs in different markets." She continued: "Mulberry is inherently English - this is evident in our use of authentic natural materials, artisinal craftsmanship and instinctive, http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 6 of 16 often quirky designs. "The warm, relaxed feeling in the stores, Bleecker Street for example, is the perfect way to convey this to people who may not previously know about the brand. We hope this will enable Mulberry to translate its previous successes to the US market too." Honey In the Rough Honey In the Rough is a recently opened small dress shop that provides a make-up service, similar to the nearby Happy Valley Store, known for its manicures and blow outs. Labels in-store are interesting for their underground styling direction Mociun (from Brooklyn) and Madison Marcus (which just debuted) and a jewellery line called Iosseliani have distinct looks and the store is garnering plenty of fashion editorial for its quirky product range. Paul Smith British designer Paul Smith has opened a new flagship store, occupying http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 7 of 16 the former Pace Gallery space in SoHo. Designs for the clothes and space alike are retro-contemporary, blending classic forms with bright colours and quirky accoutrements. The store design, led by Smith himself, carries the men's and women's lines, some furniture and a selection of books. Project No. 8 Project No. 8 is the collaboration of the artistic Yale graduate Brian Janusiak and Berlin gallery partner Elizabeth Beers. Both colleagues have been involved in fashion, media and art projects and joined in 2005 to open their store on Division Street, on the edge of Chinatown. The store name, Project No 8., was created because this is their eighth project as a team. The retail space resembles an exhibition area with its slate grey flooring, white brick walls and merchandise displayed with an artistic flair. Janusiak and Beers say: "Having a retail space is a chance for us to experiment with - more publicly - some themes that reoccurred in our own work: concerns with distribution, collaboration, digression and the creation of fluctuating or indefinite communities. "We have tried to imagine the store to be, in part, a place for the projects people had no immediate or obvious home for, liking the idea of digression as an intentional (and sometimes necessary) change of subject." VM highlights are the nine red gloves laid out on the floor in a circle. http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 8 of 16 Puma Sports lifestyle brand Puma launched its fourth store in Union Square. Designed by Paolo Lucchetta, the store took inspirations from a shipping container. Floor units look like crates and sliding panels along the wall appear as rows of showboxes. Efficiency and flexibility were key when designing fixtures, allowing easy removal of magnetic strips so that graphics and storytelling could be changed frequently. Luchetta believed it "important for each space to retain its original walls", so he mounted or suspended fixtures from the existing walls and painted the floor grey. His vision was not to "design a real concept store, but an urban space". In terms of its merchandising strategy, product is sorted according to theme as opposed to category highlighting the brand's focus on lifestyle collections: Moto, Evisu and Golf. The store will house all its ranges alongside its Mongolian BBQ concept, accessory line collaborations with Dutch designer Marcel Wanders, Alexander McQueen and Philippe Starck. http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 9 of 16 Té Casan "Fast fashion" footwear retailing has been given a new spin by Barcelona footwear designer chain Té Casan, which had its global launch in New York in December when the company launched its first flagship store on West Broadway. The 3,000sq ft store over three levels is its first and biggest out of the 50 planned global stores, housing between seven to 10 new styles each week from seven chosen European designers. Asil Attar, creative director, told WGSN: "We wanted to launch a company where the objective is to launch future designers… and we wanted it to be the biggest footwear store in New York." Design Company Pompei AD based their design concept on "little touches". Features are the changing room pods, and the tea and wine bar where woman can gather and share each other's shopping experiences. Over the three floors, the main feature is the central winding staircase giving each designer their own selling space. The seven designers making up the Té Casan roster are: Manuela Filipovic, Gaetano Perrone, Gianluca Soldi, Zoe Lee, Fay Baldock, Niki Robinson and Hector Rubio. http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 10 of 16 Theory In early December, Theory launched its global headquarters and flagship store in its Meatpacking location, as a focus on the contemporary brand's retail plans and partly because of its historic and visionary personality. The 60,000sq ft space houses design, distribution and the retail space, which stretches out on the corner of Greenwich Street and Gansenvort Street and comprises its flagship on the ground level and its central operations on the upper floors. The interior design was based on Theory's principles: integrity and quality. On the ground level it is clean, white, industrial and open plan with groups of mannequins scattered throughout the floor. This January, as part of Theory's Icon Project promotion, the space is being used for installations of iconic images. As you go through the upper floors, black-and-white photography is displayed everywhere. In headquarters, raw materials are used, such as steel, concrete and plywood alongside eclectic furniture of organic shapes in wool, felt, canvas and rope. A "map of the world" commissioned by New York artist Gary Gagliano is placed on a wall in the lobby area. Main features are its rooftop garden and central unifying staircase. http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 11 of 16 Trina Turk The Californian designer has launched her first boutique in Manhattan's Meatpacking District on Gansevoort Street. The 2,000sq ft space is decorated with a southern Californian atmosphere taking inspirations from a 1975 suburban ranch house. Jonathan Adler, collaborator and interior designer, helped Turk. Dark wooden doors, retro furniture and hung fabric covered panels in apricot, corals, turquoise, ochre and chocolate are hung in various places. Other features are the fireplace with a custom tile designed by Adler, a copied Edward Wormley coral-coloured sofa, vintage white étagère and Victorian-esque wicker chairs. WGSN's favourites are the Lucite egg chair hung from the ceiling, and artist Malcolm Hill producing a tree made from scrap pieces of wood and furniture. Turk commented on her new East Coast location: "I wanted something that felt airy and I really like this neighborhood. The High Line ends half a block away. I'm interested in architecture, and the fact that there are young architects working on it intrigued me. We need to be here for the visibility. We don't have a retail apartment. It's just me and my husband. The stores are sort of a personal thing for us." http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 12 of 16 True Religion West Coast brand True Religion launched its first East Coast shop on Prince Street, SoHo. The 1,800sq ft store concept adheres to its Manhattan Beach store in Los Angeles. The only difference is that there is more space to allow its sportswear line to expand. Interior design features include hickory wood floors, cubbies filled with folded jeans and a denim bar for customers who require sales assistant services. http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 13 of 16 Samantha Thavasa The Asia accessories brand opened its first US flagship boutique on Madison Avenue in October. The New York store is the first of a handful of US locations with Las Vegas or Honalulu likely to be next. The US push coincides with New York socialite Tinsely Mortimer being appointed as new US face for the brand (alongside fellow celebrities such as Paris Hilton and Victoria Beckham back in Japan). Designed by Japanese interior designer Yoshimitsu Morita, the 1,250sq ft boutique houses items from its popular collections: Samantha Thavasa, ST New York, ST Deluxe, ST Petite Choice, ST by Nicky Hilton and Samantha Thavasa by Tinsley Mortimer. Tobias Buschmann, US brand manager, told WGSN that the US market was the brand's biggest challenge outside its successful Japanese market. He said: "The New York store is the focal point for communicting the brand values." He added that the reason why they chose Madison Avenue was because it is the "epicentre of world fashion and virtually every major http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 14 of 16 global fashion and accessories company has a presence there." Interior design features are the brand's signature blue and pink crystals on chandeliers, the tiered entrance, white-leathered shelves, and a wall with Samantha Thavasa spelt in Swarvoski crystals. Shivtz NYC Casual-luxe continues its Eastward migration from its birthplace in Los Angeles. Shvitz NYC opened recently in SoHo selling high-end sweat suits and loungewear in a 500sq ft retail space. Its name, Shvitz, is a Yiddish word meaning "sweat" and its retail concept is derived from Leslie Hall, former executive of Vibe magazine. The interior design by Hilary White Interior Design resembles a boudoir of mirrored chrome walls, Roman columns and white chandeliers. WGSN particularly loved the baby pink MAC computer to add femininity. Valley http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 15 of 16 This living room-styled shop was launched by the Werman sisters, Julia and Nina, on the Lower East Side. More than an apparel shop, it is an exhibition space where Valley will host seasonal art installations and events. It also has a café stocking energising and healthy foods for busy shoppers, and nail and wax bar for customers to stop over or spend an entire afternoon. The sisters joined with Nails Magazine's Nail Technician 2005/06 winner Patty Yankee Williams to help build the nail bar and its services. The shop houses avant-garde designers such as Grey Ant, Ladies of the Canyon, Deener Denim, Carolina K and Lady Leisure. Uniqlo Japanese retailer, Uniqlo, opened its first global and world's largest flagship store of 36,000sq ft in New York City. Architect Masamichi Katayama designed the store accordingly to contemporary Japanese retail culture. Architectural landmark features such as brick walls and large white columns are fused with modern Japanese design. The interior, described as "functional beauty", is brightlit, clean, simple, spacious and streamlined. Tadashi Yanai, chairman and CEO of Fast Retailing (Uniqlo's parent company), told WGSN: "Not only is New York City the international fashion capital of the world, but it is also where the original idea of Uniqlo came to me… I was inspired by the bustling energy of the city and how some retailers were able to create a calm and organised environment allowing shoppers to explore and experience at their own pace." Nobuo Domae, CEO and president of Uniqlo USA, Inc, said that "the sheer size and scope of the new global flagship allows Uniqlo the opportunity to experiment and evolve the brand in the US and the world." http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007 New York retail update: new stores Boutiques & chains Page 16 of 16 © WGSN 2007 http://www.wgsn.com/members/retail-talk/features/rt2007jan30_019218_a 1/30/2007