Architecture: AS Co. & Peter Marino Architect
Project: Louis Vuitton Ginza Namiki
Photo: Daici Ano
Location: Tokyo, Japan
We recently wrote about glass facades, indirectly mentioning Apple’s retail stores. I can’t help but continue this topic. Today, we’re discussing a representative of one of the wealthiest groups in the luxury fashion sector, known by the initials LV, a brand coveted by women worldwide and beyond.
Having impressive resources and the ambition to create a unique product results in a distinctive architecture. This architecture not only highlights the company’s principles but also influences the shaping of the urban environment.
I would be very curious to review the project brief, specifically to understand the associative array chosen for setting the task. Even without the brand identity, there emerges a strange sense of brand recognition, or at least, the architecture’s connection to the art of high fashion.
Project: Louis Vuitton Ginza Namiki
Photo: Daici Ano
Location: Tokyo, Japan
We recently wrote about glass facades, indirectly mentioning Apple’s retail stores. I can’t help but continue this topic. Today, we’re discussing a representative of one of the wealthiest groups in the luxury fashion sector, known by the initials LV, a brand coveted by women worldwide and beyond.
Having impressive resources and the ambition to create a unique product results in a distinctive architecture. This architecture not only highlights the company’s principles but also influences the shaping of the urban environment.
I would be very curious to review the project brief, specifically to understand the associative array chosen for setting the task. Even without the brand identity, there emerges a strange sense of brand recognition, or at least, the architecture’s connection to the art of high fashion.