Posts Tagged ‘retail design’

23/11

Lisl

Bungalow Eight, Mumbai

Bungalow Eight in Mumbai (not to be confused with London’s Bungalow 8 nightclub) is a beautifully curated luxury store, selling products ranging from high quality clothes to home ware. The store is spread across a three story building, designed by architect Bijoy Jain, and takes its name from the address where Maithili Ahluwalia, the owner, grew up. The spacious building has unusually high ceilings and was left mostly bare, with raw concrete and exposed trusses. The few fixtures that do adorn the space is minimal and high end, like the tube lights by Michael Anstassiades. The selection of objects on sale all originate from either India or France and are arranged in such a way that you may be mistaken for being in someone’s home.


22/12

Sigrid

AESOP AOYAMA SHOP BY SCHEMATA ARCHITECTURE

Japanese architect Jo Nagasaka of Schemata Architects has designed the interior of the first Aesop shop in Aoyama, Tokyo. Mainly built from materials found in an abandoned house in nakano-ku due for demolition, the space is minimal and contemporary whilst possessing the warmth and richness of traditional Japanese design.

Aesop’s range of hair and skincare products sit on bundles of timber taken from the abandoned ‘murazawa’ house and wooden panels from the house are reincarnated as neatly stacked display shelves. The best thing about this project is the attention to detail, clearly fuelled by a deep appreciation of raw everyday materials and the glimpses of past uses they reveal. Blank surfaces are defined by small details of the shops skeleton. Much like a Rachel Whiteread sculptures, channels are dug around water pipes and manholes in the  floor and filled with epoxy resin and lighting cables are exposed and arranged in linear patterns, like delicate drawings.

via designboom images

17/11

Veronica

Creative Interior Design at Anthropologie, London

Anthropologie, the eclectic American retailer specialising in hip, boho clothing and chic home ware products opened in London’s busy Regent St earlier this month.  The label originally evolved from a stylish sportswear line developed by sister store, Urban Outfitters.  The opening of the boutique marks the brand’s European retail outlet debut and the first opening of an Anthropologie store outside the USA.

Anthropologie derived from the word ‘Anthropology’, which means the study of the human being and how we all differ from one another, has an interior and products that reflect its name’s meaning.   With an assortment of fashion brands and home ware products as well as an interior that features a living wall of various plant species, individuality and differentiation are ongoing visual themes.  Shortly after its opening, the front window display featured a cluster of tea bags suspended from the ceiling like a chandelier.   The tea bags, which appeared to be used, created a sense of wonder at the potential of everyday objects and how they fill our lives. The interior design, like the products, is not only aesthetically pleasing, it is cerebral and instantly take their viewer on a journey; how many tea bags do we use every day?  How many thoughts and ideas did these tea bags assist with in their own little way?

There are many quirky interior design and visual merchandising details within the boutique that add to its character. Teapots, cups and saucers continue on from the tea theme to decorate the walls.  As with the tea bag chandelier they are presented intriguingly; they are wrapped in fabrics like lace and loosely knit wool that appear to be supporting them to the wall, like the objects are caught in a spider’s web.  At the entrance a mannequin wears a skirt made out of smashed cups and saucers, adding to the theme of recycled or lost and found everyday objects.  Overall the entrance area feels like fusion of shabby chic, eco-friendly design and the mad hatter’s tea party.

Different sections of the Regent St Anthropologie store offer different experiences.  The basement offered a sea theme as an enormous sculpture of an underwater creature hung from the ceiling.  Below this a table decorated with ropes and rocks displayed culinary tools. The top floor displayed a bed with logs beneath the base, evoking the idea of a cosy fireplace at a countryside cottage.  All areas are connected by a gigantic vertical garden; literally a wall of greenery which extends from the basement through to the top floor providing an organic backdrop for the staircase.  The garden features several different types of plant species and shades of green- blues and purple-reds.

Amazingly, the eclectic mix of brands, products and interior design concepts works really well together.  Exploration, individuality and differentiation weave their way through the Anthropologie boutique, making it a truly inspirational place.  The space is a perfect example of how creative and strong interior design is so important when it comes to creating that word-of-mouth buzz.Sea Creature, Anthropologie, Regent Sttea bags in window, anthropologie regent stvertical garden, Anthropologie, London, Regent Stvertical garden, Anthropologie, London, Regent StHanging Teabags, Anthropologie, Regent StLiving Wall, Anthropologie, Regent St

27/02

admin

Yohji Yamamoto Flagship Store Review By B3 Designers

Yohji Yamamoto Flagship Store in Paris

A new flagship store by fashion designer Yohi Yamamoto has opened on Rue Cambon in Paris. The new store is the latest in the designer’s “white box” store concept, which mixes retail space with a gallery.
Designed by Sophie Hicks, the store stands out easily but unobtrusively on this typical Parisian street.
The original facade has simply been painted white, thus creating a distinct separation from neighbouring buildings while still keeping intact the original features of the premises. Origami like folded Shojigami (japanese screen paper) lines the inside of the entire shop front windows and creates a semi translucent white screen which allows passers by to peep through the openings and see the inside of the space. The design of the interior continues this white scheme; the floors as well as the walls and ceiling are a brilliant white which gives the space an ethereal quality.

06/01

admin

Dior Homme Paris Installation Review by B3 Designers

Andrea Mastrovito installation for Dior Homme

Young Italian artist Andrea Mastrovito has been commissioned by Dior Homme artistic director Kris Van Assche to create an insatalltiona piece for the store in Paris. The artist took inspiration from Van Assche’s Fall/Winter ‘08 collection which featured butterflies throughout.
Inside the store, nine thousand black cut out butterflies are fixed to the ceiling, collums and walls, forming and elegant 3d pattern on the pristine white walls of the space. The installation is delicate
but also a little bit eery as the butterflies seem to be alive and ready to flutter around you and settle somewhere else


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