OPINION / NIC MONISSE
Project permanence
Last week I met Moe Krimat, strategic creative director of Seen Displays, the design studio behind a host of high-end retail fit-outs in cities from Milan to New York. As we chatted over an espresso, he told me that “everyone is now trying to design retail environments that can be more flexible”.
It seems that retailers want furniture that can be reconfigured quickly and easily. But too often this results in display cases on spindly castor wheels and stock sitting on pegboard shelves. And while it’s the most adaptable shops that have been most successful in recent times, there’s something to be said for the assurance offered to both the shopper and the high street by permanent fittings. After all, retail spaces are at their best when they feel purposeful and have intent.
But that doesn’t mean that they can’t still be flexible. For proof, look to Krimat’s fit-out of Bally’s new Regent Street shop in London. At its centre is a rammed-earth-and-clay-brick table that folds over a chrome plinth, the robust and heavy material choice creating the illusion of a permanent, immovable installation. The table and plinth can, however, each stand alone and be shifted around the shop should its configuration need to change. The piece is a reminder that we can design flexibly without having furniture that screams, “I’m ready to move at the drop of a hat.”
More designers should be looking to create spaces like this: ones that look permanent but can be readily reconfigured; shops that exude confidence and remain ready for business changes too. And after the shake-up we’ve all had – especially those in bricks-and-mortar retail – I think we could all use a bit more of that.