Next up, Rem Koolhaas’ OMA will design the brand’s new flagship shop-in-shop at Macy’s in Herald Square and will also be designing the Coach Omotesando flagship in Tokyo. Both projects for Coach were designed by OMA's New York office, led by partner-in-charge Shohei Shigematsu with project architect Rami Abou-Khalil. OMA has also designed high-end retail space for Prada in New York and Beverly Hills.
WWD reported this week that Koolhaas will bring a clean, modern aesthetic to glass and acrylic modular display units slated for 1,930 square feet of the Macy’s ground floor and expected to open in September.
Shigematsu commented: "We wanted a system that could tell the story of any of Coach's wide repertoire of products, whilst projecting the legibility of its original stores. We created a system of modular display units that can be assembled to respond to the specific needs of each locale. In typical instances they are used for display; in others, they come together as an interior fixture. These units can also enclose spaces for program or curation, and by creating enclosures, they can also act as façades. OMA's intention is to use combinations of this logical system to create magical spatial possibilities for Coach, in line with Coach's motto of 'logic and magic."
American fashion brand Coach has commissioned OMA to develop a new merchandizing system that accommodates Coach's wide diversity of products while returning to the clarity of Coach's heritage stores. The collaboration, led by OMA partner Shohei Shigematsu, will begin inside upcoming flagship stores in New York and Tokyo.
Since establishing its first workshop in 1941, Coach has diversified its range and style, while simultaneously broadening the spectrum of its retail environment: from factory stores to outlets, shop-in-shops, boutiques and flagships. Although this expansion transformed Coach from a specialist leather atelier to a global distributor of "democratized luxury goods", it also clouded the clarity of the brand's original, library-like stores which used a rigorous organizational system, categorically sorting products inside minimal wooden shelving at assisted counters.