Mon, Nov 28, 2016


Lifestyle
Selfridges unveils largest accessories destination


Selfridges will triple the size of its current luxury handbag department to change the way customers shop for luxury accessories and designer handbags in particular. 

By transforming its existing handbag department into the ultimate global destination for luxury accessories, Selfridges continues to deliver its vision to be the destination for the most extraordinary customer experience, making its 107 year-old flagship store more relevant than ever.


THE ACCESSORIES HALL EXPERIENCE

The Accessories Hall is an environment which, despite its exceptional 60,000 sq ft footprint, has been designed to provide customers with on intimate, personalised and unique experience each time they visit.

Everything has been designed to make the beauty and craftsmanship capitalised in each luxury item sold from the Accessories Hall, resonate in every aspect of the customer experience. This retail approach applies to the intelligent architecture which plays a crucial part in the customer experience by making it very intuitive. Products are showcased within the space in a unique way that will bring greater meaning to each purchase and will reinforce customers’ appreciation of each product as a true investment rather than just a commodity.


DUKE STREET TRANSFORMATION

Designed in close collaboration with the highly esteemed British architect David Chipperfield, Selfridges’ Accessories Hall is an awe­ inspiring, stimulating wall-less single-space destination without equal around the world. 

Due to open in three main phases over the next two years, the Accessories Hall is part of the biggest investment project undertaken by Selfridges (or any other department store worldwide). Over £300 million have been pledged to transform the eastern wing on Duke Street of the London store over four years. The project is due to complete in summer 2018.

Selfridges’ unprecedented investment master-plan aims to create ultimate, service and solution-driven, aesthetically smart and architecturally daring luxury destinations, such as the new Accessories Hall, or the Body Studio opened earlier in April, all designed to stand the test of times.

Within the Accessories Hall, phase one reveals 10 new luxury concept brand boutiques designed to be both distinctive and unified by David Chipperfield's cohesive, fluid aesthetic treatment of the space. The flagship accessories boutiques are Balenciaga, Burberry, Chanel, Celine, Chloe, Chrome Hearts, Gucci, Loewe, Mulberry and Saint Laurent.

Anchoring the whole Accessories Hall space is The Fount - a new cocktail concept bar open in partnership with renowned Mixologist and winner of the International Bartender of the Year Award 2015, Ryan Chetiyawardana - aka Lyon. 

The Fount is anchored by four accessories spaces by UK-based brand Anya Hindmarch, Jimmy Choo, Alexander McQueen and Stella McCartney - each brand is collaborating with David Chipperfield Architects to create a focal point inspired by the transparency and movement of water. This special collaboration highlights Selfridges’ ongoing commitment to supporting great British and UK-based talent.


A NEW ENTRANCE AND CROSS RAIL

Externally too, the master-plan will maximise public realm opportunities. The Duke Street facade of the store will undergo a dramatic alteration, making way for a new triple-height entrance into the Accessories Hall - still part of the David Chipperfield commission - created to unify the store's hitherto mismatched aesthetic. Customers will be presented with an outstanding contemporary grand entrance alternative to the historic neo-classical Queen of Time canopy entrance on Oxford Street. Architecturally, both entrances will be at once entirely sympathetic with each other and radically different.

Additionally, the advent of Cross Rail's Bond Street station (opening in December 2018) at close proximity to the store will strengthen Selfridges' prime position within the London's West End.

This ambitious master-plan has strong parallels and ties with the long-cherished never-realised ambition of Selfridges’ founder Harry Gordon Selfridge to create a unified block of remarkable retail space occupying the entire footprint within the Oxford Street, Orchard Street, Wigmore Street and Duke Street quadrant.

The architecture-obsessed founder was known to have commissioned well over 12,000 drawings to fully explore the project, and worked closely with Doniel Burnham (creator of the Flat Iron Building among many ground-breaking buildings) and with Sr John Burnet (creator of Selfridges Extension construction, Somerset Street and the British Museum initial extension). He was also fixated on the idea of a huge tower or dome - higher than St Paul's - sitting on top of the completed unified block which was never approved by the council. Selfridge achieved some of this ambition during his lifetime, famously tripling the size of his original 1909 store by extending it across Oxford Street between Orchard Street and Duke Street by 1928 - it then had the biggest footprint of any department stores in Europe.

After his death, further developments were made in the early fifties towards Wigmore Street but visually the store never looked unified from the side streets. The current Duke Street transformation project - most chiefly through the creation of the new spectacular triple-height entrance - is seeking to address the most visible signs of this disparity.





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