Every month we take a look at the retail landscape and pick out the 'stores we love'. Here's our latest pick for November 2014. Read more.
This month has seen brands diversify, from sports stores becoming wellness hubs to a heritage brand ramping up in-store digital. Take a look at our pick…
United Arrows opened a new concept store in Ginza, Tokyo that blends city casual fashion with contemporary running wear, earlier this year. En Route’s mission statement reads: “No cars, no taxis, no buses, no trains”, and the store has been built to reflect ‘wearable Tokyo’ – blending fashion and sportswear. The interior has an industrial softness through the combination of pale wood and steel framework, but the main store feature is the ‘running station’ on the second floor, where there are locker rooms and showers as well as recommended running routes through Tokyo’s metropolitan maze.
Dutch brand Denham has expanded its offering on home turf with a Denim Bar focused completely on women and how hard it can be to select the perfect pair of jeans. A stark white interior forms the backdrop to vintage props from the Denham archive, a 300-degree mirror booth, and bespoke dressing-rooms inspired by beach huts in the British seaside resort of Brighton.
Fresh from holding a Nike women’s innovation summit with 27 top female athletes in New York, Nike has just opened its first store for women in California, closely followed by a store in Shanghai, China. The concept is meant to reflect the cultural shift around sport and fitness as a complete lifestyle choice – e.g. buying an outfit that can transfer from yoga to brunch – and creates a community feel through yoga and training classes, and a special events space. The store interior uses reclaimed maple wood from a Californian high school on the floor and walls.
We’ve reinvented the traditional car showroom and created a dynamic, digitally enhanced ‘auto boutique’ for new automotive retailer Rockar. Launching its first store in Bluewater shopping centre, the exciting new space offers the Hyundai range. Emphasising informality and transparency, Rockar’s omnichannel model allows customers to purchase a new car without ever having to speak to a salesperson, if desired. Alongside Hyundai display cars, the 2,000sqft store is populated with 42 digital screens. Each digital touchpoint has been designed to empower the customer with the details they need to make an informed purchase, as well as equipping the in-store staff – dubbed ‘angels’ – with the tools they need to engage and advise.
After the success of Frame Magazine’s pop-up store earlier this year, they have found a new location in Amsterdam to create an innovative 3D magazine experience: “two shops in one with the coexistence of contradictory atmospheres”. Upon entering the store, the installation of white panels and framed images seemingly float in the space, while when viewed from the other direction black display units contrast form a stark contrast against the white walls.
Iconic British outdoor brand Hunter opened its first flagship store on London’s busy Regent Street earlier this month, delivering “a retail experience that represents the brand’s exciting new vision and future,” according to the brand’s creative director, Alasdhair Willis. The store is a modern interpretation of a countryside barn in an electric colour palette. One of the stand-out features is five metre-high LED screen, which showcases content from their campaign imagery, store events, and London Fashion Week shows.