MVSA Architects
Shoebaloo
MVSA Architects
1. Dezember 2014
Photo: © Jeroen Musch (All photos courtesy of MVSA)
MVSA designed Shoebaloo’s newest store on 5 Koningsplein, Amsterdam. Shoebaloo is renowned for its high-end designer shoes and accessories, and has various branches in the city. The women’s store is located beside the men’s store at 7 Koningsplein.
Shoebaloo’s stores are distinguished by exceptional interior design with a chicness that reflects the brands on display. Alongside stores in Amsterdam, branches are also located in Rotterdam, Utrecht and Maastricht. MVSA Architects also designed the store on PC Hooftstraat and those in the other cities.
Photo: © Jeroen Musch
Radiant and Inviting
The new Shoebaloo flagship store is situated on Koningsplein, a prominent square in the center of Amsterdam. The historic inner city is characterised by an interwoven structure of individual plots. The new facade of this listed building, with its open ground floor storefront surrounded by two narrow Belgian bluestone piers, reinforces this individuality. The facade opening is fitted with a translucent glass front with a bright white display window behind.
Photo: © Jeroen Musch
In the Shoebaloo tradition, the design of the Koningsplein store features a unique retail concept that suits the high-end designer shoes and accessories on display. More than just a store, Shoebaloo offers a spatial experience where shoes emerge like precious treasures. The concept of many Shoebaloo stores presents a closed, mysterious display window that reveals little of what lies behind.
At Shoebaloo 5 Koningsplein, in contrary, this world already appears open and transparent from the outside. The glass front has an elliptical bright white display window that gradually transforms into two openings that, from the street, view into the store. The display window glows invitingly.
Photo: © Jeroen Musch
A dynamic play of lines emerges from the openings in the display window, where varying heights of curving translucent surfaces, with integrated lighting, display the shoes.
The store comprises two elliptical spaces that gravitate towards each other in the centre of the space. At the rear is the counter and a large vertical elliptic vitrine, both integrated into the contours. Behind the counter is a smaller display that houses accessories. The freestanding mirrors and seating elements were custom-designed for the interior.
Photo: © Jeroen Musch
The sinuous walls are clad with layers of pure white Hi-Macs, a solid surface material. Continuing the play of lines in the walls, the displays are fashioned from thinner layers of translucent Hi-Macs underlit with LEDs.
The floor is composed of book-matched marble slabs. Two ellipses of white marble feature black veins. The middle section where the elliptical spaces start to merge is articulated in reverse in black marble with white veins. The dark ellipse ceilings feature a pattern of fluid, bright, glowing lines that twist through a starry sky.
Photo: © Jeroen Musch
Project Details
Client: SHOEBALOO BV, Amsterdam
Design: Roberto Meyer, MVSA Architects, Amsterdam
Project leader: Harry van den Berg
Project team: Jutta Groosman, Jurgen Codfried, Mark Ohm, Ana Carmen Gutiérrez Narvarte, Roberto Bonilla (model)
Installations advisor: Wichers & Dreef, Badhoevedorp
Contractor for interior: Smeulders Interior Group, Nuenen
M&E engineer: Kersten Retail, Elst
Facade: Bouwbedrijf De Vries en Verburg, Stolwijk A Tre Natuursteen, Hoofddorp
Lighting: Aerts Lighting, Eindhoven (shop) Ansorg, Ouderkerk a/d Amstel (shop window)
Floor: A Tre Natuursteen, Hoofddorp
Ceiling: Stretch Design, Amsterdam
Miscellaneous: Bone Solid, Bergeijk (application solid surface ‘Hi-Macs’)
Floor area: 81 m² (gfa)
Final design: November 2013
Construction: September – November 2014
Completion: 25 November 2014
Photography: © Jeroen Musch
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