uniqlo1

The Uniqlo Megastore has opened near Skinjuku station in Tokyo, an area with a lot of foot traffic indeed and a need to stop very fast moving traffic in order to secure sales. Its one of those situations where the volume of passing traffic can be more of a curse than a blessing. The other challenge was that the particular position of the store was in a relatively dark corner (making people feel less secure to stop) surrounded by all the bright neons beckoning people elsewhere.

uniqlo2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

From the outside there are three display towers at the entrance, marked out by the an illuminated floor which is studded with inset lights. Surround this, the rest of the facade consists of two surfaces created from dark high-tech looking blocks where the mortar lines are replaced with lights, giving a strong geometric lines. The genius of this is that the lit “bricks” add light but also echo adjacent architectural lines so strongly that they essentially disappear from consciousness and leave the Uniqlo logo suspended and center of attention.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

uniqlo3

 

 

 

 

The angle & position of the lit towers assist in blurring the boundaries between the street and the retail space, creating a unique environment in a busy street of Shinjuku.

 

 

 

 

 

uniqlo4

 

 

 

 

The ceiling is mirrored at the entrance, creating an amazing gallery of reflections which make it look like the vertical towers go on forever up through the structure.

 

 

 

 

 

uniqlo6uni08unqlo5By contrast the interior has been designed to almost not exist – being extremely simplistic and relying on positioning & light to ensure that Uniqlo’s products are the star. Its so neutral that the products seem to float in a white glow.

 

 

uniqloflooruniqlo19

3469249471 5046979a28

Architects: Curiosity

Interior Contractor: Tanseisha

Facade Contractor: Taisei Service Area:3043m²

Photography: Nacasa & Partners

The Last Ten Minutes of Luxury

The Last Ten Minutes of Luxury

Guests pay for days yet remember minutes. The peak end rule explains why a stay often lives or dies on one high moment and the day of departure. What works, what fails, and how to design the arc so memory carries your brand home.

Swiss Cheese Thinking: From Disaster Metaphor to Strategic Advantage

Swiss Cheese Thinking: From Disaster Metaphor to Strategic Advantage

We use the Swiss Cheese Model to explain how failures happen—but what if we flipped it? This article explores how Swiss Cheese Thinking can transform traditional strategic planning into a resilience-based, investor-grade framework that absorbs shocks instead of collapsing under them.