Via Venetto Store Interior by Buensalido+Architects
Buensalido+Architects have completed a retail store interior in Makati City, Philippines.
Full description after the photos….

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Via Venetto Store Interior by Buensalido+Architects
For the first store we designed for Via Venetto, a 30-year old shoe retail store, the brief was to give it a new contemporary image to recapture its market. The dilemna that was initially faced was that it has long established a great reputation in the retail scene, and so veering to far from its original look could alter the market’s perception of it for the worst. We therefore tried to find a balance between maintaining some of its characteristics and infusing them with newer, more contemporary forms.
The word ‘via’ is italian for roadway, path, or walkway. These words are almost synonymous to the characteristic of ‘movement’. Translated physically, the feeling of movement was represented by a series of undulating archs that loom over you as you traverse inside the store. The experience almost becomes ceremonial. These archs were then interconnected with a myriad of beams, forming a diamond shaped faceted web. The parralelism of the diamond represents the store’s standing in the local retail community – in the same way a diamond has developed its sparkle through time, the brand attained the market’s trust thru time as well.
Visit the Buensalido+Architects website – here.
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Mike Thoene on 24 Feb 2010 at 7:21 pm #
That is crazy.. I would go insane looking at that all the time. Not something to be inspired in, that’s for sure.
Chris on 24 Feb 2010 at 7:41 pm #
If you squint hard enough, you can almost see the London 2012 logo in the negative space.
Anonymous on 25 Feb 2010 at 12:44 am #
For sure, the shoes were not considered during the design process.
m o n i q u e on 25 Feb 2010 at 2:18 am #
GORGEOUS!
Davidsign on 25 Feb 2010 at 3:24 am #
Pretty bold concept. Though it’s not on my taste, I think it’s interesting.
Michael McTigue on 25 Feb 2010 at 3:48 am #
All style, no substance.
Rudy on 25 Feb 2010 at 5:14 am #
Like it. It is a departure from displaying the merchandize on a pedestal as if you are buying art. I am not into those minimal store concepts at all.
peter keating on 11 Mar 2010 at 7:51 pm #
we’re the same you and i!
we see surface as design, we try forgetting the true metaphor and concentrate on what does not matter.
we try to be cool and they all love it
if it works for them then it works for us!
phillip kudzayi on 28 Mar 2010 at 7:58 am #
its too brutal. particularly for such a small store. I commend the architects’ boldness though.
Betty Wilson on 10 May 2010 at 6:23 pm #
Oh my god, I think this is one of the ugliest things I’ve seen. As a shopper, I would probably never enter the store. From a design perspective, there is neither sense of control nor conscious effort to design around the product being displayed. I love avant garde design but this looks like a head on collision of several buses.
Dalia on 11 Jul 2010 at 8:36 am #
I like the boldness in it for sure, but I wish it werent in such a small store….it’s too much for such a space, it needs room to breath!
CYNDI on 17 Aug 2010 at 9:24 am #
I am a modernist. however, I have seen this already in actual. to be honest, it looks too cramped. it could have worked well if (1) it is in a bigger space (2) its not a retail store for shoes. Definitely draws attention AWAY from shoes.
Jeff on 10 Dec 2010 at 1:47 am #
granted, concept is there… thought process and execution is very poor…