Camper Store Malmö – The Shoe Testing Facility by Note Design Studio

Swedish firm Note Design Studio devised a set of mobile metal trolleys to display shoes at this store for footwear brand Camper.

Camper Store Malmo - The Shoe Testing Facility by Note Design Studio

Display furniture at the shop in Malmö, Sweden, is made of perforated metal painted in pastel shades, and features wheels and handles for easy maneuvering when the shop is reconfigured.

Camper Store Malmo - The Shoe Testing Facility by Note Design Studio

The stockroom at the back of the space comprises 2000 shoe boxes housed in an archive of rolling bookshelves on rails, clad with mirrors on the ends and operated with big red winding handles.

Camper Store Malmo - The Shoe Testing Facility by Note Design Studio

The space also features an arched mirror leant against one wall, a cluster of Note Design Studio’s Trapets for Swedish brand Zero and their Bolt stool for French brand La Chance.

Camper Store Malmo - The Shoe Testing Facility by Note Design Studio

The walls are painted in dark grey to contrast with Camper‘s distinctive red branding.

Camper Store Malmo - The Shoe Testing Facility by Note Design Studio

“We created a space that conveyed the wayward energy in many of the Camper shoes, but still an environment where the products remained in focus,” said Cristiano Pigazzini of Note Design Studio. “Together, the various objects create a calm, inviting whole that can be easily altered just by manual power.”

Camper Store Malmo - The Shoe Testing Facility by Note Design Studio

See Note Design Studio’s collection of furniture inspired by camping and field trips in our earlier story.

Camper Store Malmo - The Shoe Testing Facility by Note Design Studio

Camper often work with high-profile designers on their stores, and collaborations in the last year include Shigeru Ban, Nendo and Studio Makkink & Bey. See all our stories about Camper retail design »

Camper Store Malmo - The Shoe Testing Facility by Note Design Studio

Photos are by Felix Gerlach.

Camper Store Malmo - The Shoe Testing Facility by Note Design Studio

The post Camper Store Malmö – The Shoe Testing
Facility by Note Design Studio
appeared first on Dezeen.

Cahier d’Exercices boutique by Saucier + Perrotte Architectes

Bright red columns interrupt a monochrome interior inside this fashion boutique in a Montreal warehouse by Canadian firm Saucier + Perrotte Architectes (+ slideshow).

Cahier d'Exercices boutique by Saucier + Perrotte Architectes

The architects inserted the store into a former industrial building, used in the nineteenth century for producing tissues, leather and fur, and they added black paint to a decaying wall of brick and stone.

Cahier d'Exercices boutique by Saucier + Perrotte Architectes

Rectangular steel clothing racks run through the centre of the room, beneath a graduated ceiling that fades from black to white.

Cahier d'Exercices boutique by Saucier + Perrotte Architectes

Saucier + Perrotte Architectes explain: “The colour changes gradually from a reflective, latex-like black to a pure diaphanous white, drawing visitors toward a reflective, opalescent mirror that extends the perspective of the space.”

Cahier d'Exercices boutique by Saucier + Perrotte Architectes

White bookshelves line the wall on the right-hand side of the space and conceal entrances to dressing rooms.

Cahier d'Exercices boutique by Saucier + Perrotte Architectes

A seating area surrounds a wood-burning stove at the front of the store, over a steel floor with a herringbone pattern.

Cahier d'Exercices boutique by Saucier + Perrotte Architectes

“This metallic floor at the entry invites visitors to discover the exclusive clothing within and relax in the warmth and comfort of the fireplace,” say the architects.

Cahier d'Exercices boutique by Saucier + Perrotte Architectes

In other retail design news, Fabio Novembre recently completed a Hong Kong boutique, while Schemata Architects have developed a new store concept for Japanese brand Takeo Kikuchi.

Cahier d'Exercices boutique by Saucier + Perrotte Architectes

See more stories about shops »

Cahier d'Exercices boutique by Saucier + Perrotte Architectes

Photography is by Marc Cramer.

Cahier d'Exercices boutique by Saucier + Perrotte Architectes

Here’s some more information from Saucier + Perrotte Architectes:


Cahier d’Exercices

Cahier d’Exercices is located at the entrance level of the historic Ross warehouse-store. The stone façade, its cast iron columns, and an expansive brick wall (punctuated with pieces of wood and metal) that runs the length of the store recall the 19th Century building’s industrial past as a retailer of large tissues, leathers and furs.

Crossing the threshold, the visitor is invited to explore the boutique by the clever use of a “degradé” — or gradient effect — on the ceiling. The colour changes gradually from a reflective, latex-like black to a pure diaphanous white, drawing visitors toward a reflective, opalescent mirror that extends the perspective of the space.

Placed at distinct intervals and delicately suspended from the ceiling, the racking system was custom designed by the architect to permit the clothing displayed to be perceived as a changing and evolving building material. Slightly reminiscent of the sculptural work of artist Fred Sandback, the straight, clearly defined profiles of the racking serve to sequence the gradient of the space.

Cahier d'Exercices boutique by Saucier + Perrotte Architectes

Above: floor plan

A veritable cabinet of curiosities, the seemingly out-of-scale shelving evokes notions of femininity and aspects of secrecy and privacy. Large fitting rooms are hidden from view, accessed by crossing through secret doors in the sculptural shelving system, which displays jewellery, footwear, and accessories. Details like the oval cross section of the racking also add a touch of the femininity, as do moments of phosphorescent vermillion red amid the store’s mostly black and white colour palette.

The store’s entrance is neither wholly masculine nor feminine in character; its floor, composed of chevrons in cold rolled steel, recalls herringbone textile patterns and historic hardwood floors while making original use of steel as a material in a retail space. This metallic floor at the entry invites visitors to discover the exclusive clothing within and relax in the warmth and comfort of the fireplace.

Location: Montréal, Québec (Old Montréal)
Client: Cahier d’Exercices
Architects: Saucier + Perrotte architectes
Program: Women Fashion Boutique, Office space, Fitting rooms, Storage space, Kitchenette
Construction cost: N/A
Total area: 1 600 sq.ft.

Materials: Herringbone blue-steel flooring, white mirror glass, mirror, Extenzo ceiling, steel clothing racks

The post Cahier d’Exercices boutique by
Saucier + Perrotte Architectes
appeared first on Dezeen.

Ring Osaka by Ninkipen!

Garments hang from a wall-mounted wooden grid inside this Osaka fashion boutique that Japanese studio Ninkipen! has recently completed (+ slideshow).

Ring Osaka by Ninkipen!

The store for Japanese fashion brand Ring has an L-shaped plan and the wooden structure wraps the prominent inside corner to create a flexible display hanger.

Ring Osaka by Ninkipen!

“We tried to create uniqueness in this shop by maximizing the potential of the given space,” said Ninkipen! founder Imazu Yasuo.

Ring Osaka by Ninkipen!

Cement boards line the two walls behind this grid, contrasting with the white-painted surfaces of the remaining walls.

Ring Osaka by Ninkipen!

Fluorescent lighting tubes hang from the ceiling on wires to illuminate the space from above. “Utilising the high ceilings, they light the whole space uniformly,” explained Yasuo.

Ring Osaka by Ninkipen!

Additional garments are presented on glass tabletops and within recesses in the walls.

Ring Osaka by Ninkipen!

Ring Osaka is located in the Herbis Plaza shopping centre.

Ring Osaka by Ninkipen!

Ninkipen! have previously worked on various shop fit-outs, including a clothing shop with fake doors and a bakery where bread is displayed on a wooden sleeperSee more stories about design by Ninkipen! »

Ring Osaka by Ninkipen!

Above: floor plan

Photography is by Hiroko Kawata.

The post Ring Osaka
by Ninkipen!
appeared first on Dezeen.

Aesop Fillmore Street by NADAAA

Reclaimed timber boxes are piled up to the ceiling to create a wall of shelves at the new San Francisco store for skin and haircare brand Aesop (+ slideshow).

Aesop Fillmore Street by NADAAA

Designed by Boston architects NADAAA, Aesop Fillmore Street draws inspiration from pre-twentieth century apothecaries, where assorted bottles and tubes would be displayed on a jumble of wall-mounted shelves.

Aesop Fillmore Street by NADAAA

The boxes were made to measure using reclaimed wooden boards, which were sanded on one side to create a variation between the inside and outside surfaces.

Aesop Fillmore Street by NADAAA

Architect Nader Tehrani explained: “Aesop has carefully considered dimensions of products as well as a clear methodology of display and presentation. We used these measurements as a means to create and array the boxes to best fulfill the quantity and types of products.”

Aesop Fillmore Street by NADAAA

Due to the limited width of the store, the boxes are only located on one wall to prevent narrowing the room and they also integrate a wooden counter with two basins.

Aesop Fillmore Street by NADAAA

The remaining walls are lined with cork, as is a second counter that can be moved into different positions.

Aesop Fillmore Street by NADAAA

“The cork is used as a scalar and textural counterbalance to the wall,” added Tehrani. “Cork has a material depth that softens the surfaces and helps attenuate undesired sounds.”

Aesop Fillmore Street by NADAAA

Aesop stores always feature unique designs because brand founder Dennis Paphitis didn’t want to create a “soulless chain”, as he told Dezeen when we met up with him recently. Other interesting Aesop branches include a Singapore shop with coconut-husk string hanging from the ceiling and a New York kiosk made from piles of newspapers.

See all our stories about Aesop »

Here’s a little more text from the brand:


Aesop Fillmore Street

San Francisco recently welcomed its first Aesop signature store at 2454 Fillmore Street, in a neighbourhood shaped by consecutive influxes of Eastern European, Japanese and African-American residents, and the heydays of American jazz and rock.

The result of a collaboration with Boston architectural firm NADAAA, this space is sibling to another launched simultaneously in Manhattan’s SoHo district. Both stores have been designed around a fascination with pre-twentieth century apothecaries and twenty-first century skin care. The predominant element in each is a tapestry of shelving crafted from reclaimed wooden boxes. Subdivided and pixilated by the varying dimensions of the boxes, the arrangement invites visual and tactile exploration; its dominance is balanced here by a cork wall and ceiling, and dark masonite flooring.

The post Aesop Fillmore Street
by NADAAA
appeared first on Dezeen.

HITGallery Hong Kong by Fabio Novembre

Two giant blue busts face each other across this Hong Kong boutique by Italian designer Fabio Novembre (+ slideshow).

HITGallery Hong Kong by Fabio Novembre

Novembre designed the interior of the HIT Gallery concept store, a branch of Italian retail group Ittiere, as a contemporary interpretation of a piazza. “The HITGallery stores we plan to open around the globe will capture the essence and spirit of Italy in wonderful new ways,” he explains.

HITGallery Hong Kong by Fabio Novembre

The busts are shaped from perpendicular planes of wood slotted together to create shelves on which accessories are displayed.

HITGallery Hong Kong by Fabio Novembre

The walls are painted with the same light blue as the figures and a monochrome zig-zag pattern covers the floor.

HITGallery Hong Kong by Fabio Novembre

“The colour defining the walls – a neutral shade bordering between green and sky or cerulean blue – defies classification, so becoming the ideal backdrop for all the brands sold in the store,” says Novembre.

HITGallery Hong Kong by Fabio Novembre

The design was inspired by the surrealist paintings of Greek-born Italian artist Giorgio De Chirico, which often feature faceless figures and arched colonnades.

HITGallery Hong Kong by Fabio Novembre

Arched niches line three walls of the store, each containing garments hung from rails or shoes and bags on glass shelves. A curved wall punctured by more arches separates the cash desk from the rest of the shop.

HITGallery Hong Kong by Fabio Novembre

Walls near to the shop window are angled to accommodate a column on one side and distort the perspective created by the entirely symmetrical layout.

HITGallery Hong Kong by Fabio Novembre

The store is located in the Times Square shopping centre on Hong Kong island. Photography is by Dennis Lo.

HITGallery Hong Kong by Fabio Novembre

See all our stories about retail »
See all our stories about Hong Kong »
See all our stories about Fabio Novembre »

The post HITGallery Hong Kong
by Fabio Novembre
appeared first on Dezeen.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Gestaltung + Production

Wine bottles are displayed in rainbow-coloured cages in this wine shop in Stuttgart, Germany, by local studio Furch Gestaltung + Produktion (+ slideshow).

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

The branch of Weinhandlung Kreis had no storage area, so Furch Gestaltung + Production was asked to squeeze 12,000 bottles of wine into the 70-square-metre space.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

They came up with a new shelving system by welding wire-grid mats into cubes.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

Each cube has slots for 25 bottles of wine, and each slot can hold almost any shape of bottle. Clip-on holders display selected bottles in an upright position.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

The grids are made of powder-coated steel in a spectrum of colours, with orange, red and yellow arranged around the shopfront and blue, green and grey in the sales room downstairs.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

“The shelf disappeared and storage became shop,” explain the architects. “This shop should consist just of wine and no furniture – similar to a spreadsheet, which is full of data without wasting any space on structure.”

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

The only other item of furniture is the small tasting bar by the window.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

Other wine shops we’ve featured on Dezeen include a shop that hides its goods behind wine bottle-shaped shutters and a shop in Zurich that uses built from the crates used to transport the bottles.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

We’ve also featured a self-service interactive wine bar in New York and a sandstone winery that is partially submerged in the ground.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

See all our stories about wine shops »
See all our stories from Stuttgart »
See all our stories about shops »

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

Photographs are by Zooey Braun.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

Here’s some more from the architects:


Wine merchant Kreis, Stuttgart, Germany
Completed August 2012

The Store

The client, a high profile sommelier and wine merchant, had to move locations and came to us with a request for a ‘different’ wine-store with a strong design which reflects the modern and fresh spirit of a new generation of wine makers.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

The predominant requirement was to place six or twelve bottles of about 1200 different types of wine (about 12,000 bottles altogether) and a small tasting bar on an area of about 70m2, spread over two levels and with no space for storage.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

From the outset it was clear that this was not manageable with traditional wooden shelving, crates or boxes. The use of space has been optimised for the benefit of the product – the shelf disappeared and storage became shop. This shop should consist just of wine and no furniture – similar to a spreadsheet, which is full of data without wasting any space on structure.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

An important aspect was the exact positioning and organisation of the various types of bottles in the shelf. A vertical sort sequence was developed, derived from the columns in a spreadsheet. Each element can carry 25 bottles, with the carries attached five cartons of wine can be stored in each of them.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

The usual romantic and idealised aesthetic of wine culture – oak furniture; earthy hues – was reinterpreted according to the cool self-conception of many young winemakers, which is also reflected in many of the new labels on bottles. It quickly became clear that the manually crafted installation we first had in mind had to be replaced with a industrially produced serial product to match the required standards of precision, function and aesthetics.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

386 ‘fourpointeight’ shelves were installed in a range of 21 colours: to soften the hard-edged industrial product, to give it some lightness and warmth, to create a sense of orientation and eventually to provide the location with some attention to the public.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

These elements thus serve as a storage area, the visually appealing presentation of wine happens via a metal carrier, which lets the individual bottle float in front of the grid. To stage the installation the surrounding walls were rendered with black lime plaster, backlights were installed to add depth and the resin floor was made bright to let the light appear from below. A small tasting bar was installed in a display window. Customers can sit on a bench in the window and enjoy a glass of wine and some regional ‘tapas’.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

The shelving element – ‘fourpointeight’ – Steel wire 4,8 mm, powder-coated:

4 prefabricated wire-grid mats, welded in two levels, are connected upright with 5 reclined wire-fans to create a spatial wire structure with the dimensions 520mm (w) x 520mm (h) x 350mm (d). The wire mats act as statically effective layers – the 5 wire-fans connect them to each other. These fans are equipped with runners, which enable the shelf to accommodate 98% of all established bottle formats elegantly. One of these elements can carry 25 bottles of wine. A circumferential wire with bend edges adds style and lightness.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

The powder coating provides protection (the shelf from corrosion, the bottles from damage) and colour, but also dampens against vibration and clanging. The robot-welded steel wire piece fourpointeight was developed up to serial production in cooperation with our manufacturer. They are added modularly to each other with a connector consisting of two metal semi-shells, which are bolted together.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

fourpointeight can be endlessly added to each other in pixel logic, gaps and cantilevers are possible. Spatial structures can be built up to a height of six elements (statically certified). The carriers for the individual bottles are made of bent sheet metal, which are suspended from the grid and secured against inadvertent dislocation with an O-ring.

Weinhandlung Kreis by Furch Design and Production

Basement plan – click above for larger image

The post Weinhandlung Kreis by
Furch Gestaltung + Production
appeared first on Dezeen.

“I was horrified at the thought of a soulless chain” – Aesop founder

Interview: recently Dezeen met up with Dennis Paphitis, founder of skincare brand Aesop. In this exclusive interview he explains why no two stores are of the same design, why he enjoys working with different architects around the world and how he believes “there’s a direct correlation between interesting, captivating store spaces and customer traffic within a store” (+ slideshow).

Aesop founder Dennis Paphitis

In the interview, conducted by Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs, Paphitis (above) explains how the brand has worked with different design teams to avoid “the kind of assault on the streetscape that retailers inflict through the ordinary course of mindless business.”

“I was horrified at the thought of Aesop evolving into a soulless chain,” he says. “I’ve always imagined what we do as the equivalent of a weighty, gold charm bracelet on the tanned wrist of a glamorous, well-read European woman who has travelled and collected interesting experiences. I felt and still do that it should be possible to grow in a lateral way without prostituting the essence of what the company is about.”

Aesop at Merci, Melbourne, by March Studio

Above: Aesop at Merci, Melbourne, by March Studio

The slideshow [top of page] features several new and previously unpublished Aesop stores. See all our stories about Aesop stores.


Marcus Fairs: Tell me the story of Aesop.

Dennis Paphitis: I’m an ex-hairdresser. I guess the qualities that remain important in Aesop stores today were also important in the salon back in the days when I was cutting hair. In busy, high traffic environments a sense of calm and composure can quickly recalibrate how people feel. I attracted complicated and difficult clients, so keeping the space visually ordered and contained made it easier for me to think and work in.

Product-wise I started by adding essential oils to the commercial hair colour we were using at the time, because the smell of ammonia is quite overwhelming. Clients responded well to these less aggressive aromas. I then looked further into other ingredients and started work with a chemist on a small range of hair care products. Eventually the hair product extended to a hand and body product category and finally skin care. I started to think this could be developed into a more substantial offer if I gave myself fully to it.

So in 1996 I stepped out of the salon altogether, and spent the next few years with our first chemist setting up the foundation for a fuller product line and more serious development. All this was done without a great deal of commercial aspiration. I was simply interested in what was happening with the product and learning more about the science of manufacturing and ingredient sourcing, product shelf life: all the necessary components of developing product and trying to do something well. The idea was to use fewer, better ingredients in a smarter way.

Aesop Shin-Marunouchi, Tokyo

Above: Aesop Shin-Marunouchi, Tokyo, by Torafu Architects

Marcus Fairs: Why did you decide to open your own stores?

Dennis Paphitis: We would try and explain to retailers that were retailing our product how we would like to be represented and communicated, but we didn’t have a tangible example to demonstrate this to them. It was all in our heads yet there wasn’t a physical reference. So the moment you do that and you control the smallest, most innocuous details such as temperature, lighting, music, smells, tactility, and the materiality of a space this has a very profound impact. Of course there must be a solid and serious product offer to have legitimacy, but these peripheral factors actually compliment the product line up. It was liberating and we were able to express ourselves as who we are.

Aesop Saint-Honoré, Paris by March Studio

Above: Aesop Saint-Honoré by March Studio

Marcus Fairs: Where was the first store?

Dennis Paphitis: The company is 25 years old however the first Aesop store proper is only 10 years old this month and we’re happy it’s still there. It’s in Melbourne, in an area called St Kilda, which I guess is a little bit like the Shoreditch or the Hackney in these parts. It felt like the appropriate area to begin in. We couldn’t find a location however there was an iconic hotel called The Prince that had a car parking ramp that was 3m wide and 25m long. They gave us this space to work with and we redirected the car park users to enter an exit from around the corner. So that was the bones of our first store.

Marcus Fairs: How many do you have now?

Dennis Paphitis: At this moment I think we have 61 stores and there are nine stores in progress; four of those are in the US, which is a huge step for us in that part of the world.

Aesop Grand Central Kiosk, New York by Tacklebox

Above: Aesop Grand Central Kiosk, New York, by Tacklebox

Marcus Fairs: The design of each of your stores is different, and you’ve worked with several different architects around the world. What’s the thinking behind that?

Dennis Paphitis: After St Kilda we opened a second store in the central part of Melbourne and opened our first store in Taipei within a few months of both. So through necessity we began to work with different architects, because of the overlapping timing. For example we needed to work with a local Taiwanese architect on the first store there. And that just got me thinking about the kind of assault on the streetscape that retailers inflict through the ordinary course of mindless business, the idea that one size would so often be forced to fit all. It wasn’t so hard to respectfully consider each space individually, consider the customer, the context and to bring a little joy into the conversation.

I was horrified at the thought of Aesop evolving into a soulless chain. I’ve always imagined what we do as the equivalent of a weighty, gold charm bracelet on the tanned wrist of a glamorous, well-read European woman who has travelled and collected interesting experiences. I felt and still do that it should be possible to grow in a lateral way without prostituting the essence of what the company is about, to have the confidence to evolve yet the retain the core of what distinguishes us. It’s become politically incorrect to discuss good taste but actually this what Aesop does best. We aspire toward a certain quality, discretion and restraint in our work. These are qualities that are almost counter intuitive in a retail market desperate to cater to short attention spans and infinite choice.

Architecturally our criteria is always to try and work with what is already there and to weave ourselves into the core and fabric of the street, rather than to impose what we were doing. We didn’t ever want a standard Aesop shade of orange or green that was plastered onto stores with a nasty logo over it, but instead to look at the streetscape and try to retain and redeem existing facades that are there, and work with a local and relevant vocabulary to contextualise what we do.

There remains a core palette of ideas that we work with: we know that every store has to have sufficient display space, by product category. For example you need to be able to walk in and say to the customer, “This is where the skincare is, this is where the hair is, the body care,” etcetera. We need a counter for transactions to occur, we need water, we need back-of-house storage, some space to sit and contemplate and think about the day. So there are all these factors that don’t vary by region but the possibility of expressing them fully will vary according to space, light and budget. It’s the same product that we’re selling worldwide but it needs to fit and connect locally.

Aesop Newbury Street, Boston, by William O'Brien Jr

Above: Aesop Newbury Street, Boston, by William O’Brien Jr

Marcus Fairs: When did you start expanding internationally?

Dennis Paphitis: Five or six years ago we looked at where we would open the first offshore company-controlled store, because Taiwan was an arrangement with an external party there. Four of us took a trip to LA, San Francisco, London and Paris and we knew that it would be one of those four cites. We opted to set up the first stall in Paris, which was really quite absurd because none of us at that time spoke French and we were aware of the commercial bureaucracy and so forth that one deals with in France.

But actually it was quite a straightforward and invigorating process once we found a store that appealed to us in the sixth. We looked at some spaces and found a bookstore that we liked and tracked down the architect. He spoke little English but there was an immediate human connection between all of us. We worked well together, and more or less from that moment on we then started to explore the possibility of working with local architects project managing development from Melbourne.

Aesop Bleecker Street, New York

We’ve continued on this path since with some architects that we’ve worked with many times over such as Rodney Eggleston, who is the founder of March Studio in Melbourne; we’ve just completed our twelfth project with him at Bleecker Street in New York [above]. Similarly Kerstin Thompson from KTA who we’re working on our sixth project with a new Adelaide store. We’ve completed five projects with Ciguë who are a fantastic young Paris based firm and are also beginning two London projects with them in the New Year.

My personal criteria in selecting architects for long term unions is not singularly the excellence of their work but more so their psycho-emotional state and capacity to communicate, function under pressure and ultimately deliver the goods with minimal trauma. There are some very impressive characters out there, this year we’ve begun three projects with NADAAA in Boston who are perhaps the most professional and sophisticated firm we’ve worked with.

Marcus Fairs: You tend to have clusters of stories in cities like London and Paris, rather than one store in every city. Why is that?

Dennis Paphitis: The thing with us is we like to go deep rather than wide, so we can’t set up a store in London then just open another one in Barcelona and in Glasgow because it seems like a good idea. We need to do a series of interconnected stores in London or whichever the chosen city is because we need the back office support structure to make it all work and hang together well. Less spread, more depth of presence with a strong and switched on infrastructure to support this.

Marcus Fairs: What influence does interior design have on sales and the performance of the shop?

Dennis Paphitis: There’s a direct correlation between interesting, captivating store spaces and customer traffic and interest within a store. I’m personally more comfortable with under-designed looking design, if that makes sense, or design that dissolves and recedes rather than screams ‘look how clever I am’. It’s not singularly the design but also a whole series of seemingly miniscule decisions and very fine calibrations that converge together to make space captivating and comfortable to be in.

Aesop at I.T Hysan One, Hong Kong by Cheungvogl

Above: Aesop at I.T Hysan One, Hong Kong by Cheungvogl

Marcus Fairs: How do you choose your architects?

Dennis Paphitis: We like to take them green but not too green; they need to have a little bit of blood on their hands. The minimum criterion is five years post-graduate working experience unless they’re extraordinarily talented and there’s some compelling reason to consider them. But if they’re 15 years into their professional journey we need to check that they’re not having a mid-life crisis or whatever it is that might implode or distract them during the process. It’s a fine line.

We sit down and share coffee and meals and try and understand their motivations. Often we are the ones seeking them out, we will see something they’ve done, hear about a talent graduate, discover some long ago project that captivates us. And then we present what we need to achieve with them and give the scope to interpret this whilst at the same time ensuring that there are sufficient shelves to store our product and a space for our staff in the back room to have lunch, a point of sale, and basins because we need water in every store, and a provision to have music, and all of the practical details that make a retail space functional and successful.

Aesop Ginza, Tokyo, by Schemata Architecture Office

Above: Aesop Ginza, Tokyo, by Schemata Architecture Office

Marcus Fairs: How involved do you get in the design of the stores?

Dennis Paphitis: Once an architect has my allegiance and loyalty they’re pretty much given carte blanche but they do need to earn it and they need to be respectful to keep it. With the guys in Paris, Ciguë, who are almost like some sort of contemporary experiment in architectural socialism, they’re extraordinarily hard working, committed and diligent, earnest and talented. Nothing with them ever runs on time, nothing runs to budget, nothing emerges in the way that you expect it to, but they pour their hearts into every job, see it through and remain responsible for the upkeep with an almost Victorian sense of propriety and dignity. I like this sense of responsibility.

We had hand-blown glass taps made by them for the Islington store, which exploded! But they will hand-blow them again and we’ve all learnt from that. It never regresses into a vulgar conversation around blame and who is responsible.

Conversely there are arrangements that we have in other parts of the world that are much more structured and sober and these are the ones that deliver at 10am on Monday 13th because that’s what’s been agreed. The work is still of a very high standard. I’m not sure if these have the same poetic capacity to arouse and to captivate, but it’s work that will certainly do its job and fulfil the brief. Personally it’s that little extra manic commitment and diligence that motivates and drives me so I enjoy this with people I work with.

Aesop Le Marais, Paris, by Ciguë

Above: Aesop Le Marais, Paris, by Ciguë

Marcus Fairs: Is your approach to hiring architects changing as the company grows?

Dennis Paphitis: What I’ve proposed is that we standardised the relationship that we have with some architects and make it a ‘marriage’ in specific regions. I’ve always worked on a “What if I get hit by a truck?” theory, so I am no longer involved in the commercial aspects of the company. My role is now more an arm’s length creative provocateur, just to kind of stir the pot a bit where I sense the design decisions being made are perhaps too safe and less energised than they might be. The truth is that many of my colleagues are far more visionary and driven than I am and have the capacity to develop and further explore the company’s next chapters.

Aesop store in Singapore by March Studio

Above: Aesop store in Singapore by March Studio

Marcus Fairs: Which store is your favourite?

Dennis Paphitis: I think the current personal favourite is always the most recent store because it’s like a new lover or something similarly engrossing. You become immersed in the moment but then they become like children and you could never admit to favouring one over the other.

Aesop, Rue Tiquetonne, Paris

We’ve just opened a fourth store in Paris in Rue Tiquetonne [above] and a sixth in London in Islington [below]. I think both of these are particularly interesting, they feel like a logical evolution of what we’ve explored with Ciguë to date. Earlier in the year we opened a little gem of a store in Collins Street, Melbourne designed by our creative team with Kerstin Thompson. The thinking behind that store was very much around speaking with men, because the location is in the banking end of town, there are lots of institutional clubs for men, bankers and the rest of it. The material references for this space are all quite sturdy, traditional yet at the same time a little subversive to an educated eye.

Aesop, Islington, London

Then we opened Geneva [see slideshow] three months ago. This one was intended to evoke more a decadent living room of maybe a central European or Middle Eastern undercover agent with an apartment in Geneva. There is extraordinary copper detailing and stuccoed plaster, quite beautiful matt, saturated skin toned walls, so that was also an interesting one.

And we also opened a second store in Zurich [see slideshow]. That was constructed largely out of cork. I’ve always been interested in cork because of the tactility and the acoustic qualities that it has. It’s a very small store though it has high visual impact and it’s been well received. Then Islington, which opened about four months or so ago. The reference point here was nurseries and seedling trays that you could slide open and close. Ciguë used a lot of plants, and since opening, the plants have quadrupled in size and grown all over the walls and products so this idea of a store never being quite finished or static is very much our thing.

We’re working with an interesting lighting firm in Beirut called .PSLAB. They’ve resolved a long-standing Aesop lighting dilemma, because our stores are generally quite under-lit by standard retail measures and they’ve managed to gently increase the lighting levels a little yet still keep it all soft and human and more living room like.

Épatant, Melbourne

Above: Épatant, Melbourne by Dennis Paphitis and Lock Smeeton

Marcus Fairs: You’ve set up a new retail concept for men. Tell me about that.

Dennis Paphitis: Épatant [above] is a separate non-Aesop project that I’m working on for a day a week. It’s intended as a kind of mental palette cleanser for me; a distraction that I can amuse myself with. I have a business partner on this project and we’ve been speaking-thinking for the last couple of years about the way men behave in a retail context, what switches them on, what engages them and what just closes them down.

It’s really just an edit of product that we like and already use and felt deserved a base to be presented from. Épatant means “dapper gent” in French and the idea was that we would have product that address all categories of a man’s life from birth until death, without necessarily touching fashion. Fashion is not something we know, and with sizes and seasons it just becomes too complicated and kind of tedious.

So there’s a website and a physical store and the idea is you can shop by brand and you can shop by category: fitness, wellbeing, personal grooming, car, office, outdoors, and so forth. Or you can shop by milestone, if you’re buying a gift for someone; birth, graduation, divorce, retirement, whatever it may be.

We share the space with some Japanese friends who have developed a food offer, thinking what does a guy want to eat for lunch? The options are quite limited in terms of food. It’s an interesting project. We also represent Aesop there because in the grooming category it was the only logical option. I generally spend four days a week working on Aesop and one day on Épatant, and I think it’s been constructive. One project fuels the other and keeps it interesting for me. It’s the first non-Aesop workplace thought I’ve had in twenty five years and I’m still trying to figure out what it all means.

The post “I was horrified at the thought of a
soulless chain” – Aesop founder
appeared first on Dezeen.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

The new Tokyo flagship store for Japanese fashion brand Takeo Kikuchi has been specifically designed by Schemata Architects to offer a richer experience than online shopping, with spaces for relaxation as well as display.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

“Today we can easily buy clothes online, and we already have enough knowledge and experiences and know how to judge good products from bad ones in our economically maturing society. What is the role of a flagship store then?” questions Schemata‘s principal Jo Nagasaka.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

The architects created the new Takeo Kikuchi store within an existing three-storey building in Shibuya, where they upgraded the glazed facade that is typical of most retail buildings by adding timber-framed windows that can be opened individually to let fresh air into different spaces.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

“We questioned the fact that most shops and offices are enclosed without natural ventilation throughout the year and usually heavily air-conditioned in summer and winter,” explain the architects.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

Inside, wooden boxes create partitions and display cases that look like packing crates, while chairs, stools and benches are dotted around between.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

There are no checkouts, so shop assistants wander around the store to take payment from customers, who can enter the store using four different entrance points.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

Visitors can also take time out from browsing by visiting a garden at the back of the store or having a seat on one of several concrete stools along the shopfront, which the architects cast inside fabric sacks.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

On the first floor, glass walls offer a look into the atelier of brand designer, Takeo Kikuchi. ”We intend to create a mutual relationship between designer and customers,” explain the architects.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

Other details inside the store include a concrete wall that appears to be padded, a set of reclaimed Windsor chairs that have been sanded to reveal the grain of the wood and cabinets with leather door panels.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

“We want to inspire customers to look at things with fresh eyes and minds by revealing ‘extraordinariness’ in ordinary things,” say the architects.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

On Dezeen we’ve also featured a Japanese entertainment store designed in response to the rise of online shopping.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

See more projects by Schemata Architects, including a food-photography studio and an office with a mirrored wall and a slide.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

Photography is by Nacása & Partners.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

Here’s a project description from Jo Nagasaka:


Takeo Kikuchi SHIBUYA

Takeo Kikuchi is one of the most distinguished and long-time popular menswear brand in Japan established in 1984. The brand is opening the long-awaited Global Flagship Store in Shibuya.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

The site is a very wide and flat site located along Meiji Douri Avenue. Four entrances are located along the street, so customers can enter from various points and freely stroll around the space, while looking at display furniture that is randomly located across the space like a forest.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

We didn’t want to set a singular circulation route, and we prepared multiple circulation routes as if the streets are extending into the store. Customers can freely move around and enjoy unique shopping experience according to his/her taste and mood.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

We did not provide any cash register counter, as the key to this new Takeo Kikuchi store is intimate person-to-person communication between shop staff and customers.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

So we eliminated cash register counters, which would normally strongly dominate space in typical stores, and encourage direct communication for more joyful shopping experiences.

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

Above: ground floor plan – click above to see larger image

Completion date: November 2012
Location: Shibuya-ku, Tokyo, Japan

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

Above: first floor plan – click above to see larger image

Building area: 198.96 sq m
Total floor area: 397.92 sq m(1F+2F)
Floors: 1F 2F
Structure: steel

Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by Schemata Architects

Above: front elevation – click above to see larger image

The post Takeo Kikuchi Shibuya by
Schemata Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Mode:lina Architekci

Polish studio Mode:lina Architekci built a tank out of cardboard tubes to make this pop-up shop for Swedish watch brand TRIWA (+ slideshow).

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Mode:lina Architekci

Located in Poznań Plaza shopping mall in the city of Poznań, Poland, the Tube Tank was designed by Mode:lina Architekci to be low-cost and quick to construct.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

The tank is built from over 900 cardboard tubes and held together with brightly coloured ratchet straps.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

The architects settled on the material first and then discovered that a tank shape would be a simple and secure way to piece the cardboard together.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

“When we did some experiments with strapping the tubes with ratchet straps, the most stable construction looked like a caterpillar tread – we decided to follow this look,” architect Jerzy Woźniak told Dezeen.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

The display cabinets for the posters and watches are made from chunky chipboard panels.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

TRIWA sales assistants stand inside the tank to sell watches to passing customers.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

Cardboard tubes have popped up in a few projects on Dezeen, including an installation in a London department store by Nicholas Grimshaw’s studio and a Japanese boutique made of hanging cardboard tubes.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

Previous projects by Mode:lina we’ve featured include a stark police station interior and a London soundscape played through tangled pipes, which we filmed as part of our Dezeen Platform micro-exhibition.

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

See all our stories about cardboard »
See all our stories about Mode:lina Architekci »
See all our stories about shops »

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

Photographs are by Mode:lina Architekci.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Once again mode:lina accepted a challenge, to create a temporary store for Swedish watch brand TRIWA. Goals, similar to previous year, were:
Use of renewable materials – Low cost
Speed of constructing
But above all, to further increase global brand awareness.

Previous cooperation between the two exceeded by far client’s expectations – pictures of the store were published around the globe, both online and offline.

Once more, designers decided to use a very well known raw material – paperboard. Only this time it was rolled into tubes. Over 900 of paper tubes, wrapped with ratchet-straps around cabinets built from raw OSB wood panels. That’s how the Tube Tank was born. Meet Triwa Pop-Up store! See you at Poznań Plaza mall (Poland)!

Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop by Modelina Architekci

Project: Tube Tank – TRIWA Pop-Up store
Design: mode:lina architekci (Paweł Garus & Jerzy Woźniak)
Project team: Paweł Garus, Jerzy Woźniak, Kinga Kin
Realisation: November / Listopad 2012
Area: 10 m2

The post Tube Tank TRIWA pop-up shop
by Mode:lina Architekci
appeared first on Dezeen.

Speedshop Type One by Torafu Architects

Japanese firm Torafu Architects renovated this auto repair shop in Tokyo to make it look as sleek as a car showroom (+ slideshow).

Speedshop Type One by Torafu Architects

Type One, located in the Ogikubo area of Tokyo, was designed by Torafu Architects to function as a display area as well as a body shop. “We designed [it to] look like a showroom in order to welcome clients who visit here to repair their car,” they told Dezeen.

Speedshop Type One by Torafu Architects

The skylights have been tidily boxed in with aluminium panels, which reflect more natural light into the shop, while strip lights travel down the ceiling in two narrow lines.

Speedshop Type One by Torafu Architects

The walls are covered in cement-bonded wood strips, which feel rough to the touch and add to the utilitarian aesthetic. A new partition wall has also been added to conceal a storage space.

Speedshop Type One by Torafu Architects

The two-post car lifts are painted grey to blend in with the muted tones of the walls and ceiling and to set off the colours of the cars.

Speedshop Type One by Torafu Architects

The architects also designed grey push carts and trolleys so that mechanics can easily store and move their parts and tools.

Speedshop Type One by Torafu Architects

“We treated these new elements as equal to the elements that were originally present, by adopting these material and expressive items that are both essential and emblematic to a repair shop,” the architects told Dezeen.

Speedshop Type One by Torafu Architects

We’ve featured lots of projects by Torafu Architects on Dezeen, including a concrete house for a wheelchair user and a desk that looks like a doll’s house.

See all our stories about Torafu Architects »
See all our stories from Japan »

Photographs are by Takumi Ota.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Speedshop Type One

We designed the renovation of a body shop specialising in Honda vehicles that would function as a repair shop as well as a display floor for visitors. The design calls for maximising the working area by thoroughly sorting out essential and non-essential elements with a focus on servicing functionality.

As elements of the interior design plan, we adopted material and expressive items that are both essential and emblematic to a repair shop, such as gray two-post car lifts, aluminum fittings and tool wagons. Care was given to treat elements that were originally present the same way as new ones, such as the aluminum canopy hanging from the top lights, push carts and the rough-feeling cemented excelsior board walls.

The design highlights the vehicles on display in the repair shop by using desaturated colors and common materials to adjust the tone of the space where the old blends with the new.

The picture of a shop with cars on lifts, exposed engines and tools is aimed at creating a functional yet slick-looking space that can serve as a promotional area.

Principle use: Vehicle repair shop / factory
Production: Ishimaru / Sanraku
Building site: Ogikubo, Tokyo
Total floor area: 458.98 sq m
Design period: 2012.07-09
Construction period: 2012.09-10

The post Speedshop Type One
by Torafu Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.