Stylish stores with great shopping experience retail design

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Stylish Stores with Great Shopping Experience: Retail Design

ISBN: 978-988-14687-1-0 Size: 235*290mm Pages: 320 Hardback

While walking into a retail shop, what attracts your attention? Is it the product itself, or the light, color and material around you? Do you know how these elements play their role in the design, and do you know how they represent the character and feature of products, in order to persuade their customers to make a purchase? From a professional point of view, this book describes the design of retail shops through a series of high-quality examples. They are diverse in theme and style. It is the design that made them outstanding and impressive. If you want to find inspirations for you next design, or simply want to explore these designs, this book is the best choice. 1.. 9 chapters divided by function, including 80 design projects, elaborate design principles in a comprehensive way. 2.. A collection of worldwide design examples, including dozens of popular brands, opens up mind and provides inspiration. 3.. Plenty of exquisite images and detailed texts create visual feast.

‘Giving specificity in daily life of people!’ ‘Is a quote that explains travelling from ‘The art of travel’ by Alain de Botton. This quote may best express Archi@mosphere’s thought on designing. This project also started with the question of putting specificity into day-to-day sales. When buying eyewear, people consider their eyesight along with the design that can best express their image. This shows that an eyewear is a product that fulfills an individual’s need for accurate function and sensibility for beauty. We found that the sales process of an eyewear is quite similar to designing a space due to these factors. Since a finished design that satisfies both the client and designer comes from the ongoing understanding and faith between each other, the core of this design was to create an ongoing communication between the staff and the consumers to increase the consumer’s satisfaction. So, an atmosphere and special configuration that can provide special and entertaining shopping experiences for the consumers and give the roles of image makers and engineers for the staff was needed. For this, we developed the local characteristics of offices and the pre-existing module system for the walls into a more active element for the second Papyrus series in Kwanghwa-Mun, which lead to a space where the displays and sales of products could simply guide the entire atmosphere.

S.F.C PAPYRUS Glasses Store

We expect this new system to create a unique shopping experience and increase purchase satisfaction. Display stands that features every service expectable when encountered with a customer along with maximizing the displayed products, storage space that also has the characteristics of a showcase, lightings that are interconnected with the storage space, and the system table which allows direct contact with the customers while building a strong visual character allowed ongoing communication between the staff and the customers. The consumers can shop the eyewear as if appreciating a work of art in a gallery and communicate with the staff as like conversing with acquaintances on a work of art.

Design Agency: Atelier Archi@Mosphere Client: PAPYRUS eyewear group Location: Seoul, Korea Area: 59 m2

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Copyright © Artpower International Publishing Co., Ltd.

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Design Agency: Guise

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The project concerns a new concept store for Fifth Avenue Shoe Repair. The Swedish fashion brand Fifth Avenue Shoe Repair works with traditional typologies of clothes but deconstructs them and create new hybrid garments. The assignment was to design an entirely new concept store that meets the commercial aspects of a retail space, but foremost to design the spatial encounter with the brand Fifth Avenue Shoe Repair. The retail concept is based on Fifth Avenue Shoe Repair design methods, but transferred into architecture. Existing architectural typologies have been deformed in order to meet both the functional and the commercial requirements for a store interior. The visual presences of the furniture are designed to be ambivalent; they should resemble a stair although clearly having another purpose.

Fifth Avenue Shoe Repair Concept Store Design Agency: Guise Design Team: Andreas Ferm, Jani Kristoffersen Client: Fifth Avenue Shoe Repair Location: Stockholm, Sweden Area: 180 m2 Photography: Jesper Lindstrรถm

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Mouli Concept Store

Our response to the first issue was to build upon the existing values of the street brand Mouli and their interest in fine art. One of the founders and the head designer, Vemund, is also a part time painter. We addressed the concept of street art that lies within the identity of Mouli. Street art being unique in the sense that it emphasis the place/position of the art as much as what is actually being painted. The origin of street art lies within graffiti, and graffiti is really an artform the has always being dependent of the site

When continuing developing the concept we were told to make a more space effective

where it is placed (please refer to early

layout, since we needed to keep the panels clean to better show the products. We

work such as seen documentary Style

designed a set of tables taking care of all of their need for folded clothes, the tables

Wars and later work by Banksy etc).

where made of flattened expanded metal with holes slightly larger than the legs. This

So we took the theme of placement

enabled us to put the tables through each other, creating a really dense but rather

as our display concept, making a

exciting display situation.

system of large white expanded metal sheets going from floor to ceiling with a system of hangers and cages that can freely be positioned anywhere on the panel. So we were able to offer the client a fully flexible system.

Design Agency: Guise Team: Jani Kristoffersen, Andreas Ferm, Peter Dell’Uva Nilsson, Beatrice Dinu Flooring: Concrete floor Floor area: 90 m2

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Bettina Liano Chapel Street

Design Agency: David Hicks Designer: David Hicks Location: Melbourne, Australia

This retail project was an investigation into understatement while making a statement. A beautifully crafted gallery like space was designed to showcase female fashion encompassing many different styles of clothing. A simple palette was put together to achieve a very considered look and finish. Thoughtful space planning was paramount in creating a space with

No detail has been spared to create an environment to accentuate the divine creations to be housed within. Signature black and white tones mixed with sumptuous stone flooring and gold detailing combine in this slick interior.

good bones to house the collection of clothing. The client wanted the space

A custom cut glass shop front leads to this inner sanctuary. Hand selected Italian marble forms a grid gently framing the

to be refined and slightly feminine without being typically girly. A certain

merchandise floor area.

amount of product was also required to be housed within this space without looking cluttered.

The look is luxury, feminine and glamorous. Interpreted into a sophisticated and modern environment, taking inspiration form the great modernist designers of the 40’s and 50’s in the 20th century. The level of finishes used and the scrutiny in their selection ensures a quality product that will form a backdrop to the exquisite workmanship of the clothing.

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The GRACE Fashion House shopping paradise is just as noble and glamorous as the brands it offers. New storage space was developed in the mezzanine to extend its sales area to over 1000 square metres. Walking through the shop’s ground floor, you will find a spiral staircase with a glass railing formally leading you to the upper floor with its generous design. Additionally, two openings that are also protected with a glass railing make it possible to cast a glance onto the respective other floor, offering just enough of an insight to raise curiosity. The first thing you will see upstairs is a long display wall backed in a silvery leather look. The clothes rails attached in front of it are effectively interrupted by extravagant glass display cases reminiscent of cut diamonds. Encased in these is the actual highlight display case with individual accessories or pieces of clothing to be presented in this very special way. This faceted language of shapes is consistently used throughout the upper area. It interprets gloss and glamour to mirror the luxury of the goods offered. All objects in the room use a multitude of facets. Light is reflected from the surfaces used — metal gloss glass, polished stainless steel and bronzed mirrors — for a shimmering effect. The effect is even enhanced by sophisticated light architecture consisting of indirect and direct light technology alike. The indirect lighting under the prism — shaped free standing pieces of furniture, in the glazed niche display cases and the cove lights above the waiting area make for particularly strong effects. Direct lighting, in contrast, focuses right on the presented pieces of clothing and accessories. The dressing stalls, a contrast to the crystal world around them with their soft shapes and materials, are located at the rear. Metal-gloss curtains protect the cabins from curious looks from the sales area and create a private atmosphere like in a private, luxurious dressing room. The sales area’s waiting room takes up the same design in the round shapes, thickly

Grace Fashion House

cushioned seats, high-pile carpet and the extravagant pendulum lamp. The different materials and shapes make for an attractive contrast to the sales area, while the colour range remains consistent.

Design Agency: HEIKAUS Concept GmbH Location: Munich, Germany Area: 1000 m² Photography: Uwe Spoering, Cologne

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Smets

Design Agency: Zoom Architecture Location: ChaussĂŠe de Louvain Brussels Belgium

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Camper New York Design Agency: Daici Ano

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A new concept for Camper’s larger shops, following on

make white resin models of the Pelotas shoe, a Camper

our concept of "shoes that walk freely through the air"

stalwart, then to fully decorate walls with them, adding

developed for Camper’s small-scale shops in cities like

volume to the space as well as the orderly atmosphere of

Osaka, Paris, San Francisco and Moscow. The design

a storeroom. The shoes catch light pouring through the

concept for the large shops had faced a consistent

windows to cast shadows on the walls, giving the space

challenge in a high-ceilinged space, to use the upper part

a three-dimensional texture. We’ve created a shop interior

of a space with high ceilings. Our new approach was to

with two types of shoes products and interior materials.

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Heikaus is giving Optik Ganz in Krumbach a new design For more than 75 years, Optik Ganz has been among the top addresses in Krumbach and the area. The main store was now redesigned to combine traditional values with modern demands and ensure that anyone looking for competent consulting and a stylish selection in addition to better sight has come to the right place here.

Ganz

Design Agency: HEIKAUS Concept GmbH Location: Krumbach, Germany Area: 95 m² Photography: Uwe Spoering, Cologne

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