Puma House Tokyo by Nendo
Designers Nendo of Japan have completed the interior of a showroom in Tokyo for sneaker brand Puma with shoes displayed on a series of timber staircases. More about Puma House Tokyo by Nendo
Designers Nendo of Japan have completed the interior of a showroom in Tokyo for sneaker brand Puma with shoes displayed on a series of timber staircases. More about Puma House Tokyo by Nendo
Foster + Partners have completed a new shopping centre that combines high-end boutiques with independent local food and craft markets on the site of a historic city marketplace in Abu Dhabi. More about The Souk, Abu Dhabi Central Market by Foster + Partners
Design cooperative NAU and DGJ have completed this interior for Swiss bank Raiffeisen in Zurich, featuring curving walls perforated to create pictures of faces. More about Open Lounge by NAU + DGJ
Architect Keiichi Hayashi of Japan has converted this traditional timber townhouse in central Kyoto into a cosmetics store. More about Kyoto Silk by Keiichi Hayashi
The interior of this Zurich wine store by Swiss architects OOS is built from crates used to transport the bottles. More about Albert Reichmuth Wine Store by OOS
Faceted chocolate-brown panels line the walls of this chocolatiers’s shop in Brussels designed by Minale Design Strategy. More about Maison des Maîtres by Minale Design Strategy
London studio Sybarite have designed a modular display system for shoe brand FitFlop. More about FitFlop store by Sybarite
London interior architects Universal Design Studio have completed the interior of a new store in Manchester, UK, for fashion brand Mulberry. More about Mulberry Manchester store by Universal Design Studio
Amsterdam architects UNStudio have completed this department store in Cheonan, South Korea. More about Galleria Centercity by UNStudio
Basel studio Pedrocchi Architekten have designed an extension to this fashion house in Austria with a faceted glass front. More about Foeger Woman Pure by Pedrocchi Architekten
Japanese interior designer Yukio Kimura has created this combined cafe, gallery and second-hand book shop in Osaka, Japan. More about Sorayumebako by Yukio Kimura
The walls, floor and ceiling of this store in Paris by Melbourne practice March Studio are covered by 3,500 pieces of wood. More about Aesop Saint-Honoré by March Studio
Process5 Design of Osaka have completed the interior of this bridal shop in Himeji, Japan. More about Bridal Magic by Process5 Design
Interior designers Shed of London and Singapore have completed the women's shoe section for London department store Harrods. More about Harrods Shoe Salon by Shed
London designer Tomás Alonso used ceramic tiles to create optical illusions in this store he designed for Spanish shoe brand Camper in London. More about Camper store in London by Tomás Alonso
Australian studio Edwards Moore have stretched tights across the walls and throughout the interior of this pop-up fashion store in Melbourne, Australia. More about Arnsdorf temporary concept store by Edwards Moore
This boutique in Antwerp by Van Halewyck & Marco Architects features glossy white surfaces in a raw concrete shell. More about Y. Di Cassanova by Van Halewyck & Marco
This installation by Italian architect Francesco Moncada for the Wrong Weather store in Porto, Portugal, features wooden furniture clustered together in different formations. More about Algebraic Variations at Wrong Weather by Francesco Moncada
Melbourne practice March Studio have trapped 4500 cardboard boxes behind netting in this store for Australian skincare brand Aesop. More about Aesop at Merci by March Studio
Japanese architect Jo Nagasaka of Schemata Architecture Office used materials reclaimed from a demolished house for the interior of this Tokyo shop for Australian skincare brand Aesop. More about Aesop Aoyama by Schemata Architecture Office