David Adjaye, the Tanzanian-born British architect, and Jack McCollough and Lazaro Hernandez, the wunderkinder behind fashion house Proenza Schouler (pronounced pro-EN-za SKOOL-er), have a lot in common: both parties found relatively early success and have been hailed for pushing the envelope in their respective design fields. It's fitting, then, that Hernandez and McCollough commissioned Adjaye to create their company's first store in their home base, New York City.

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The 3,000-square-foot boutique occupies a double-height ground-level retail space in a historic Neoclassical residential building on Manhattan's Madison Avenue. Sandwiched between a hair salon and a jeweler, its facade stands out, particularly with its bronzed-steel door, out of which dozens of triangles have been cut. This motif is a nod to both the fashion house's sumptuous garments–which are frequently woven, hammered, and scored with geometric patterns–and the hard-edged aesthetic that characterizes McCollough and Hernandez's work. “We played with using their name for a while, and their old logo, before settling on something more architectural,” says Russell Crader, the project architect for Adjaye Associates. The store took five months to complete, with concept and design lasting about two months, Crader explains, and construction about three.

Certain aspects of the $1.5 million project, such as removing an existing floor to create the double-height entry space and replacing a masonry lintel in the entryway with a steel bar, required approval by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. Luckily, the design passed scrutiny, as “the steel screen is really part of the overall Proenza Schouler strategy for identity,” says Crader.

The exterior foreshadows the interior's rich yet rough-hewn aesthetic. In the entrance foyer, which separates the shop from the residences above, the design team treated the brick walls with an ash wash that's “rubbed in and gives the wall a stained effect,” says Crader. Ghosts of structural elements past, like holes in the wall left behind by joists, or discolored masonry, remain and become points of aesthetic interest.

On the first of two sales floors (the second occupies a mezzanine level accessed via a staircase at the back of the store), the combination of walnut-stained Parallam-wood walls and ceilings and halogen spot lighting sets a mood akin to an haute cave. Smaller goods–accessories, handbags, and shoes–sit atop short metal shelves that employees can rearrange by positioning them in various notches in the timber columns that run the length of the store. A platform at the rear of the boutique also accommodates product displays. “When they want to pair items in a collection, they have the flexibility to choreograph the space however they want,” says Crader.

Precast-concrete panels on the floors and walls of the second level lend the upper spaces heft without the darkness of the entry floor. Jackets, skirts, and larger ready-to-wear items hang from sales racks suspended from tubes of bronzed steel. Fitting rooms on this level are lined with soft, sandy-hued buffalo leather. On a recent visit, the punchy greens, yellows, and blues of the spring 2013 collection vibrated against the gray of the walls and floors. “While the space is not a blank canvas, it is a neutral environment,” says Crader. “There's just enough of a background to allow shoppers to focus in on the colors. It gives everything a bit of life.”

Formal name of building: Proenza Schouler

Location: 822 Madison Avenue

Completion Date: July 2012

Gross square footage: 3010sq/ft

Total construction cost: $1,500,000


Credits

Architect:

Adjaye Associates
415 Broadway 3rd Floor
New York NY 10013
(t) 212 965 8477

Personnel in architect's firm who should receive special credit:
David Adjaye
Russell Crader
Liz McDonald
Glenn DeRoche

 

Architect of record:

Al Smith III AS3 Design Studio
216 W135th Street
New York, NY 10030
(t) 212 234 9930

 

Engineer(s):

MEP FP:
Buro Happold
100 Broadway
New York, NY 10005

Structural Engineer:
Buro Happold
100 Broadway
New York, NY 10005

 

Consultant(S):

Lighting:
Focus Lighting
221 W116th Street
New York, NY 10026
(t) 212 865 1565

 

General contractor:

Apogee Construction
315 W 39th St #1103
New York NY, 10018
(t) 212 244 2844

 

Specifications

Contact name and phone number should we have additional questions on specifications

Russell Crader 212 965 8477

 

Structural system

Existing

 

Exterior cladding

Masonry: Existing

Metal Panels:
Mistral, Architectural Metal and Glass Inc
37-19 56th Street
Woodside, NY 11377
(718.721.2150)

Metal/glass curtain wall:
Mistral, Architectural Metal and Glass Inc

Wood:
Parallam
Installed by:
J.P. Roche Inc. Architectural Woodwork
55 South St.
Mount Vernon, NY

Moisture barrier:
Existing

 

Windows

Metal frame
Mistral, Architectural Metal and Glass Inc

 

Glazing

Glass:
Mistral, Architectural Metal and Glass Inc

 

Doors

Entrances:
Custom metal gate
YS Associates LLC
Custom Metal Work

Sliding doors:
Dato Door

 

Hardware

Hardware consultants: Weinstein & Holtzman, Inc

 

Interior finishes

Paints and stains:
Soot wash by Dyebrick

Wall coverings:
Custom leather panels (fitting room)
EuroDesign Group
Contact: Arletta Subocz
Phone: 845 351 3208

Paneling:
Terrazzio (pre-cast panels)

Floor and wall tile:
CMU veneer
Terrazzio (pre-cast panels)

Special interior finishes unique to this project:
Ornamental metal screen
YS Associates LLC
Custom Metal Work

 

Furnishings

Chairs:
Metal benches by Al Meshcon/A&M Welding
518.265.5913

Tables:
Al Meshcon
A&M Welding
518.265.5913

Upholstery:
Tania Kovalenko Ltd.
113 Franklin Street Suite FF, Brooklyn, NY 11222
(718) 383-0792

 

Lighting

Downlights:
Lightolier
Performance Recessed CFL downlighting