September 1, 2007
Brand Loyalty
In architecture and interior design, “branding” is often a bad idea. Too frequently it means applying existing identities (logos, color schemes) to a large-scale project that should properly be grounded in other concerns (form, user experience). But the new flagship store for affordable-design giant Umbra, which opened in downtown Toronto last June, is a rare […]
In architecture and interior design, “branding” is often a bad idea. Too frequently it means applying existing identities (logos, color schemes) to a large-scale project that should properly be grounded in other concerns (form, user experience). But the new flagship store for affordable-design giant Umbra, which opened in downtown Toronto last June, is a rare instance of brand-as-architecture that actually works.
The exterior of the three-story box, designed by local firm Kohn Shnier Architects, is clad in LED-lit polycarbonate strips in the signature pink hue—“Think Pink”—used in some of the company’s most successful products (notably Karim Rashid’s Oh Chair). Inside the 7,000-square-foot store, interior architects Figure3 crafted a bright white space with one signature decorative element: a row of five chandeliers made from Umbra’s Flow lamps, mounted a dozen at a time and suspended in the central two-story atrium. The resulting space feels like Umbra at its best—colorful and somewhat novel, but also straightforward and well designed. Now that’s branding.
Recent Programs
Programs
Who are Ella and Faraz?