Luxury stores with the most beautiful interiors – Luxebook

Posted: May 18, 2023 at 1:10 am

Luxury stores with the most beautiful interiors - Luxebook Luxury stores with the most beautiful interiors - Luxebook Arushi Sakhuja and Jade CrastoThe link between retail stores and architecture has always been very strong. For this reason, many brands have taken the help of several famous designers to design their luxury stores to make it an experience. The result? A series of boutiques around the world that look like art installations. LuxeBook takes you through the most remarkable and intriguing shop interiors from pool-inspired designs to opulent chandeliers and sculptures. Are you a design enthusiast? A traveller? Then these stores will leave you awe-inspired. Burberry Mykonos, GreeceBurberry GreeceThe Burberry pop-up store in Nammos Village gives you a glimpse of true Mediterranean aesthetic. Immersed in nature, the structure is presented with a palette of pistachio green and beige and is enriched with blue and pink summer shades. Throughout the store, fixtures and details are built with a variety of materials and textures, from plywood to mirrored, glossy finishes and a dash of greenery. The outdoor terrace features a wooden pergola inspired by traditional Mykonos buildings, with TB Summer Monogram blue siding. The ground floor features a blank canvas wall where visitors can add illustrations and custom tags, similar to the Burberry Bond Street store.Glossier, SeattleGlossier, SeattleLocated in the Capitol Hill neighbourhood and designed by Glossiers in-house team, the 2,800-square-foot retail space is the brands largest physical store to date. A large sculpture at the centre of the space is designed to look like a boulder covered in moss and colourful mushrooms, influenced by the flora of the Pacific Northwest region. This is based on a landscape installation created by designer Lily Kwong for the pop-up and a terraced hill is evoked by a stack of flat thin cushions upholstered in various green textiles and leathers along the large store windows. Walls around the store are finished in light-toned textured walls and beige and dusty-pink tiles cover the floor. On the exterior, doors and window trims are painted a dark blush hue to match the Glossier logo and contrast the buildings cream brickwork, making it look palatial. Aesop, Hong KongAesop, Hong KongAesop has added yet another store to its extensive retail network in Hong Kong. The store features an interior design by architecture practice Nadaaa from Boston. Evoking a refined state of construction, Aesop reflects an immersive sense of calm, by drawing on a neutral, natural palette. With extensive use of raw materials and exposed finishes, the store uses beams of reclaimed Oak shelves set on blackened steel frames, offering a wonderful textual interplay. An elongated sink of oxidised copper punctuates the sophisticated industrial aesthetic.Dolce & Gabbana Rome, ItalyDolce & Gabbana Rome, ItalyDolce & Gabbana is well known for its exaggerated designs that steer clear of sobriety. Over the years the brand has designed the image of a new Italian aesthetic in the world. Their boutique in Piazza di Spagna, in Rome, the heart of the Eternal City, the capital of Italian history and culture, could not be less. Housed within the walls of a majestic sixteenth-century palace, the shop looks like a real Roman temple made of marble, mosaics and frescoes. A digitalised fresco depicting Greek gods is the focal point of luxury fashion brands store. Set within a 16th-century palazzo the store reflects a city synonymous with magnificence and uniqueness. Circular mosaics have also been embedded into the high-gloss floors, inscribed with the words paradise, love and beauty.Selexyz Dominicanen Maastricht, NetherlandsSelexyz Dominicanen Maastricht, NetherlandsThe contemporary building interior of the Bookstore Selexyz Dominicanen was designed by Merkx+Girod architects in Maastricht, Netherlands for the Dutch booksellers Selexyz Dominicanen. Merkx+Girod were commissioned by the Dutch booksellers to convert the interior of the former Dominican Church in Maastricht into a modern bookstore. The interior design takes advantage of the spatial magnificence of the churchs architecture. To satisfy BGNs need for 1,200 m2 of selling space and given that the churchs floor area is of only 750 m2, Evelyn Merkx and Patrice Girod thought to insert an oversized walk-in bookcase. In order to preserve the character of the church while achieving the desired commercial square footage, the architects decided to insert an oversized walk-in bookcase where the books are kept. The lighting, which is an all but integral part of the stores design, manifests itself in the chorus by way of a traditional chandelier above the crucifix-shaped table located in the caf area.Gavello Nel Blu, Mykonos, GreeceGavello Nel Blu, Mykonos, GreeceGavello Nel Blu, designed by SAINT OF ATHENS, is a jewellery store with an interior that resembles a real swimming pool: light blue tiles. This jewellery shop on the Greek island of Mykonos was designed to resemble a 1960s swimming pool. Creative agency Saint of Athens worked with Dive Architects on the project for Italian brand Gavello to make the store stand out from its neighbours.As you enter the shop, you get the impression that you are swimming in an empty pool. The walls and floors are made of light blue tiles, and a ladder and beach balls stamped with the brands logo decorate this soothing world. There are also lockers to store your things and red and white striped cushions. The architects have also included other accessories such as mirrors, display cases, and display cones for an even greater vacation feel! Innovative, isnt it? The jewelry is displayed on a rectangular table in the centre of the store as well as inside four niches embedded into the blue tiled walls. The goal behind the design of this store was to show that with a few square meters, you can create a surreal and innovative space while still representing the image of a brand. That you can create a store in which you want to enter into.Moniker, OsloMoniker, OsloMoniker Fashion Universe, in Oslo, is a 1,500-square-metre concept store that Norwegian design studio Snhetta said is supposed to feel like a treasure hunt. Called Moniker Fashion Universe the 1,500-metre-square concept store is located in the heart of Oslos shopping district, near the newly renovated Valkyrien Square. Fixed partition walls create a maze of rooms set within a different visual universe built around different personality traits and based on, for example, space travel, motor racing and the French Riviera. Just like the womenswear department, which is split into five zones that are built around five different personality traits, Moniker Man is split into two distinct zones built around the character traits of sensitive and ambitious. Featuring striped fabrics, plenty of foliage and a lilac and yellow colour palette, Delons zone takes its design cues from the French Riviera. According to the studio, the playful design of this zone is designed to challenge our conception of what falls into the categories of feminine and masculine. In the ambitious zone, which pays homage to Paul Newman, the design team created a classic ambience through a luxurious material palette. This is contrasted with industrial materials that nod to the racing industry.Idli by Thierry Journo Jaipur, IndiaIdli by Thierry Journo Jaipur, IndiaExperience Jaipur through a contemporary lens at lifestyle boutique Idli, the brainchild of French designer Thierry Journo. The theatrical space features trompe loeil canopy and breezy palm tree murals, where handmade furnishings and hand-painted vases mingle with colourful fashion creations. The new store, on Subhash Marg, in C-Schemethe citys poshest residential areais filled with light and showcases his work at stints as a copyist at the Louvre, in collaborations with Thierry Mugler and Andree Putman, and as an illustrator for John Galliano.The space comes alive with doorways that are framed by striped, trompe loeil canopies, tropical palms and grass on the wall and paper lanterns in a rainbow of colours hanging from the ceiling. The entire effect is fantastical, quintessentially French. Sabyasachi, New YorkInto the world of SabyasachiSabyasachi built its first international store in the United States in the West Village of New York. The store is intended to depict Mukherjees trip from Kolkata to New York and to showcase the opulent richness for which his creations are recognised. The store reflects a classic look, suited to the modern customer, and is inspired by historic residences and palaces of the Indian metropolis. The corridors are filled from floor to ceiling with framed paintings influenced by Persian dynasty Qajar art, 16th-century Mughal miniatures, Indian Pichhwais, and antique pictures. Glass chandeliers hung low from the ceiling illuminated this decked-out maze, where tables were overflowing with food served on silvera custom arrangement for the event.JJ Valaya, AerocityPhoto Courtesy: JJ ValayaFar from the frantic throng, the flagship shop has various design schools. The master couturier created, developed and designed everything in the store, which takes a maximalist but never gaudy approach to design. The store contains a tiny reception area and a jewellery department featuring Aulerth and the new bridge-to-luxury brand, JJV. A winding staircase brings you to the actual treasure, which has equal room for his couture and home lines. The shop is adorned with the designers photographic works, and his home space is an expression of his passion for photography, travel, and all things luxurious. With over three decades of experience in the business, the designer is an institution in his own right, and his designs have a luxurious, old feel to them. A room is dedicated to some of his most expensive and complex bridal lehengas, which are displayed in a museum-style setting and coupled with beautiful dupattas and shawls. He recognises the need for a bridge or pret companies that cater to other minor events, as well as curate travel outfits. JJ Valayas charm is that it is maximalist yet the needlework is ageless.Arjun Kilachand, Mumbai

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Luxury stores with the most beautiful interiors - Luxebook

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