
New York-based architecture firm Peter Marino Architect has renovated the Louis Vuitton’s London store with a channelled and colourful explosion, wrapping and marking the facade of the building.

Officially opened on October 23, the store, called Louis Vuitton Bond Street, the store has been reopened after a 14-month renovation. The space is revived with different colourful touches, objects and pieces that mix art and design in an harmonized way.

The space features a sweeping double helix shaped staircase crafted in cerused oak and worked as a sculpture with an offset centre, while the outside of the building is marked with a giant explosion of a channelled installation where Louis Vuitton‘s monogram icons takes over the stores’ frontage.


“The face of retail changes so fast,” said Peter Marino. “It’s very much a necessity for [brands] to have these big special statements in key landmark locations.“



In the main atrium, beneath four cocoon chairs by the Campana Brothers, there is a space is dedicated to a permanent selection of objets nomades, the collection of designer travel and home-related objects that launched in 2012.



Inside, a “changeable gallery space” welcomes its visitors, featuring 43 artworks from 25 artists including site-specific commissions from Sarah Crowner, Jim Lambie, Josh Sperling, Farhad Moshiri, and Matt Gagnon.

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