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UGG Flagship

Florencia Pita & Co. & Quezada Architecture

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UGG FLAGSHIP New York - PHOTO AMY BARKOW
UGG FLAGSHIP New York - PHOTO AMY BARKOW
UGG FLAGSHIP New York - PHOTO AMY BARKOW
UGG FLAGSHIP New York - PHOTO AMY BARKOW

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Comments
Innovation
Functionality
Creativity
Eco-Social Impact
Total
JURY VOTES
Single-Brand Store
4.31
6.69
4.69
4.38
5.02
Client
Deckers - UGG
Floor area
12800 ㎡
Completion
2020
Principal Designer
Architect of Record - AOR

Los Angeles-based architecture studio Florencia Pita & Co. in partnership with San Francisco-based architecture and design studio Quezada Architecture, has designed the new Fifth Avenue flagship store for UGG in New York City. The Southern-California-based company is launching a global expansion, with this flagship store signifying its evolution from purveyor of their classic boot to a broad lifestyle brand. The design of the boutique is inspired by the experience of California and informed by the reinterpretation of traditional craftsmanship, with custom fixtures and furniture made through both advanced and traditional fabrication techniques in downtown Los Angeles. To recreate the experience and ethos of California, the architects looked to architecture, art, film and literature. The Eames’ mid-century case study house, in which a steel structure and modular “kit of parts” were employed to create an open and flexible space that existed in harmony with nature, inspired the layout of the brand’s new flagship. The quality of light and landscape in California inspired both a glowing LED wall and the store’s soft, curving contours. Like the work of Ed Ruscha and David Hockney, the architects sought to achieve more than just a snapshot of California, rather, a more layered image of California and its ideals, guided by openness and flexibility. At the north wall, the structure is backed by a large graphic wall that leads to the back of the store, curving as it welcomes customers to take the escalator to the second level. The graphic surface features LED lights; on the ground level, its graphic will change every season, but as one takes the escalator, the experience changes to one of immersive light, with the translucent programmable LED lighting coming from the wall and ceiling surfaces. The escalator, as a transitional space similar to the open roof courtyard typical of a mid-century house, suggests a soft, glowing, California-inspired sunset . At the second floor, there is a shift towards more intimate and domestic experience: displays and private seating areas are arranged to emulate living rooms and cozy parlors, with details that exude warmth, including soft lighting and textured surfaces. Two hallmarks of the UGG brand were abstracted to form design motifs throughout the store, and brought to life using craft techniques. The UGG logo pattern was abstracted to a geometric profile and repeated, forming a pattern that was laser-cut into the metal surfaces of furniture, fixtures, and parts of the facade. The geometry of the classic UGG boot undersole also figures into the surfaces throughout. As inspiration, the architects looked at the embossed “sun flake” geometry and the undulating curve of the sole when viewed from the side. The curve was extruded to create a custom-milled panel material with vertical grooves and light and shadow effects, giving texture and character to the walls and surfaces of displays and tables throughout. Custom-made terrazzo in a soft white hue with gold and grey-silver flecks also figures prominently in the design, but through a reinvented approach. While the material is typically used for flooring, here it is molded to wrap fixtures and furniture such as benches, tables, and risers. Instead of appearing as a flat surface, the material becomes volumetric, with plasticity and softness. Its composition of aggregate stone and bonding polymer provides a textured effect.