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Good Design Is Good BusinessGood Design Is Good Business 2015

Macy's Herald Square by Charles Sparks + Company

New York City

By Linda C. Lentz
Macy's Herald Square
Studio V reimagined the original 1902 building's hypostyle retail hall. Existing portals between it and the adjoining annex were made wider and faced with the Calacatta Tucci marble that also surfaces the floor in Fine Jewelry and resembles existing stone at the entrance.
 
Photo © Paul Warchol
Macy's Herald Square
New venues and services are attracting a range of customers'local and visiting'into the store. A bridal jewelry shop adjacent to Fine Jewelry on the main floor offers personalized service in elegant surroundings.
 
Photo © Paul Warchol
Macy's Herald Square
Stella 34, a Michelin Guide'rated trattoria with polished decor and views of the Empire State Building, replaces a sixth-floor stock room in which the windows had been blocked.
 
Photo © Paul Warchol
Macy's Herald Square
The women's shoe department by Charles Sparks + Company is one of the largest in the world, with designer boutiques and roomlike areas that focus on individual brands or style categories. A caf' with views of Broadway (behind the curved wall) is a gracious addition, serving champagne and chocolate as well as specialty coffees.
 
Photo © Paul Warchol
Macy's Herald Square
The open main selling floor is flanked by curved stairs that lead up to a sculptural mezzanine around it, while fluted columns and high coffered ceilings hide mechanical and technology systems.
 
Photo © Paul Warchol
Memorial Entrance on West 34th Street
Memorial Entrance on West 34th Street
 
Photo © Jayd Jackson
Macy's Herald Square
Broadway fa'ade and entrance with recently exposed mezzanine windows.
 
Photo © Jayd Jackson
Macy's Herald Square
Broadway fa'ade and entrance with recently exposed mezzanine windows.
 
Photo © Jayd Jackson
Macy's Herald Square
Broadway fa'ade at 35th Street entrance to store and Stella 34, Macy's Michelin Star-rated restaurant
 
Photo © Jayd Jackson
Macy's Herald Square
Existing Broadway fa'ade and entrance prior to Kennon's renovation. At the time of this photo, the 1902 building's original mezzanine windows were still covered by granite.
 
Photo © Jayd Jackson
Macy's Herald Square
Renovated Seventh Avenue entrance with new LED display
 
Photo © Jayd Jackson
Macy's Herald Square
Newly opened street-side and mezzanine windows along the West 34th Street fa'ade allow passersby to see what's happening in the store'and also bring daylight inside.
 
Photo © Jayd Jackson
Macy's Herald Square
The Grand Retail Hall with curved stair to the mezzanine
 
Photo © Paul Warchol
Macy's Herald Square
Existing wood elevators were repaired and restored
 
Photo © Paul Warchol
Macy's Herald Square
Recently installed escalators in the Grand Retail Hall lead up to the new shoe floor and Herald Square Caf'.
 
Photo © Paul Warchol
Macy's Herald Square
2nd Floor Women's Shoe Department
 
Photo © Charlie Mayer
Macy's Herald Square
2nd Floor Herald Square Caf'
 
Photo © Charlie Mayer
Macy's Herald Square
New men's store, main floor
 
Photo © Charlie Mayer
Macy's Herald Square
New men's store, 2nd Floor
 
Photo © Charlie Mayer
Macy's Herald Square
New men's store, 4th floors
 
Photo © Charlie Mayer
Macy's Herald Square
New men's store, 4th floor
 
Photo © Charlie Mayer
Macy's Herald Square
New men's store, 4th floor
 
Photo © Charlie Mayer
Macy's Herald Square
New men's store, 4th floor
 
Photo © Charlie Mayer
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Memorial Entrance on West 34th Street
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
Macy's Herald Square
May 16, 2015

You don't need retail savvy to sense the success of the two-year-old women's shoe department on the second floor of Macy's Herald Square. A consolidation of smaller, obscure shops scattered around the building, the 39,000-square-foot sales area offers an array of footwear from luxury to budget, arranged by type or brand in individual boutiques or open 'rooms.' It also features a caf', with newly exposed windows overlooking Broadway.

This comfortably urbane shoe salon was one of the first phases of a $400 million storewide overhaul that began in 2011 and is due to wrap up later this year. Designed by suburban-Chicago-based Charles Sparks + Company, it embodies the spirit and commitment with which parent company Macy's Inc. is striving to improve the customer experience and revitalize its historic flagship.

A succession of early 20th-century buildings'a 1902 Beaux Arts structure by De Lemos & Cordes at Broadway and 34th Street, and three increasingly Moderne additions by Robert Kohn completed in 1924, 1928, and 1931'Macy's Herald Square occupies an entire city block. At more than 1 million square feet of retail space, it is one of the largest department stores in the world and nearly as big a tourist attraction as its neighbor the Empire State Building.

The Herald Square store is 'the face of Macy's,' says senior vice president of store design Tom Herndon. This is why the executive management team made a strategic decision to renovate and reimagine the entire building, he adds. During the postwar decades it suffered misguided remodelings and had become tired, difficult to traverse, and largely neglected above the first few levels, where tourists congregate.

The goal was to reclaim as much of the existing architecture as possible and at the same time bring the store into the 21st century with state-of-the-art technology, improved circulation, and a timeless scheme. To do this without disrupting business on the 11 retail floors, Herndon tapped the expertise of several firms. In addition to Sparks, who also devised a men's store-within-a-store on seven levels of the building's west side, key players include two local firms, Studio V and Kevin Kennon Architects, and BHDP, a Cincinatti-based practice that recently completed a much refreshed women's fashion area on the fourth floor.

Studio V developed a master plan with the in-store design team, logically layering the selling floors, restoring all of the existing wood escalators, and adding vertical transportation that leads customers to new target areas like the shoe floor, a newly restored mezzanine, and Stella 34, a destination restaurant the firm created on the sixth floor. Led by principal Jay Valgora, Studio V reinstated the elegance of the 1902 building's ground-floor retail hall, laying the foundation for much of the design language used throughout the store.

Kennon, responsible for refurbishing the exterior, worked with the various design teams to reveal (or recreate) blocked windows, introducing daylight and views into the mezzanine and ground floor along 34th Street as well as the caf', Stella 34, and designer shops on the Broadway facade. He reworked existing lobbies to accommodate cutting-edge LED signage and revived the original main entry on 34th Street, the Memorial Entrance, so called for its plaques honoring Macy's employees lost during World War I, along with co-owner Isador Strauss and his wife, Ida, who died on the Titanic.

The nearly complete restoration is clean and contemporary, yet maintains the building's bones and legacy. Moreover, by reconfiguring mechanicals and stock rooms, the architects gained ceiling height and an additional 100,000 square feet of selling area. Though the company doesn't share sales figures, Herndon says that customers are responding in an extremely positive way'and with their pocketbooks. And it's contagious, he notes: 'Every time we open up a new area, there is a halo effect on the areas that have already opened.'

Architects:
Studio V Architecture — Jay Valgora, principal; Charles Sparks + Company — Charles Sparks, principal; Kevin Kennon Architects — Kevin Kennon, principal; BHDP Architecture — Andrew McQuilkin, retail leader

Gross square footage: approximately 1.1 million
square feet

Project cost: $400 million

Completion Date: November 2015 (projected)

People

Client/Owner: Macy’s

Design Team:
Studio V Architecture
Charles Sparks + Company
Kevin Kennon Architects
BHDP Architecture
FRCH Design Worldwide
Shea Design
CSA

Personnel in architect's firm who should receive special credit:
Studio V — Principal: Jay Valgora; Principal: Randy Ng; Project Manager: Michael Bevivino
Senior Designers: Florence Orlando, Julio George, Glen Lee; Designer: Zongye Lee; Intern Giulio Carlon

Kevin Kennon Architects: Principal: Kevin Kennon; Project Manager: Paul Sheehan, Jason Kim; Senior technical associate: Armando Gutierrez; Job Captain: Matthew Haseltine; Associates: Caroline Quinio, Ankur Verma, Se Jung Oh; Design Team: Hongsuk Kim, Ninad Garware, Jim Tung, Kai Yu Yu, Tanita Choudhury, Allison Shawn Conley, Manuel Saba
http://kkarchitect.com/

Architect of record:
Principal in Charge: Thomas G. Hauck, AIA
Highland Associates
www.highlandassociates.com

Engineers:
M/E/P: Syska Hennessy Group

Structural: Thornton Tomasetti

Consultant(s):
Lighting Design:
Lighting Workshop —Doug Russell LC, LEED AP
www.ltgworkshop.com

Technology:
Creative Realities

Code Consultant:
Milrose Consultants

Stone:
Stone Source Direct

Metal & Glass:
Empire Architectural Metal + Glass
Contact: http://www.empirearchmetal.com/

Glazing:
M. Ludvik & Company
Contact: http://mludvik.com/

General contractor:
James Phelan Construction Company; E.C. Provini Construction; StructureTone

 

Products

Structural system
New tube steel beams and posts for storefronts.

(The Broadway marquee roof was partially rebuilt with new framing.)

Exterior cladding
Masonry:  Stony Creek Granite to match existing polished Cold Spring Black granite base

Metal Panels:  Steel cladding painted to match new and existing bronze cladding

Paint: PPG Coraflon paint “Dark Briar”

All existing and new bronze patina/stained dark statuary bronze.

Roofing
Built-up roofing: Paradiene 30 modified bitumen by Siplast with painted aluminum flashings (for marquee roofs)

Windows
Metal frame: Hope’s and Optimum painted steel windows and new custom and restored bronze storefronts.  PPG Coraflon paint “Dark Briar”

Glazing
Glass: Low iron clear glass

Doors
Entrances: 
Dawson bronze balanced doors with oxidized statuary finished
Crane bronze revolving doors with oxidized statuary finished

Metal doors:
Macy’s: Access Doors to Elevator: Bronze (to match existing)
Manufacturer: Delform Studios

Hardware
Pulls: Trimco bronze push/pull bars

Other special hardware: Besam SW200i automatic door operators.

Interior finishes
Acoustical ceilings: Armstrong

Glass:
Archetype Glass, Inc.
Bendheim Glass
McGrory Glass, Inc.

Ceilings:
Stella: Special GFRG Ceiling   Formglas Manufacturer: Design Resources

Demountable partitions:
Stella: Restaurant Room Divider
Manufacturer: Roger Arlington, Rep.: Pierre Frey
Contact: Katie Bungarz, Tel: 212-546-9001

Paints and stains:
PPG Coraflon
Benjamin Moore
Matthews Paint Company
Tiger Drylac

Wall coverings:
Innovative Stone
Chilewich
Kravet
Carnegie
Blue Sky Design
Stone Source Direct
Carnegie
Donghia
Innovations
Koroseal
Knoll
Maya Romanoff
Studio E
Wolf Gordon

Paneling:
Span Craft Glass
Brookside

Plastic laminate:
Architectural Systems
Nevamar
Laminart
Formica
Pionite
Arpa
Wilsonart International

Stone & Solid surfacing:
Innovative Stone
DuPont Corian
Caesar Stone
Stonesource
Wilkstone
LG Hausys
Karen Pearse Global Direct
Wilsonart Solid Surface

Special surfacing:
Resin — Kinon
3Form
Architectural Systems Inc.
Marbleux Decorative Coatings
Delform Studios

Floor and wall tile:
Nemo
Hirsh Glass Co.

Resilient flooring:
Johnsonite
Armstrong World Industries
 Amtico International

Carpet: 
Tandus
Karastan
Patcraft Commercial Carpet
Karastan
Atlas Carpet Mills
Bigelow
Mannington
Masland
Mohawk
Shaw Contract Group

Wood Flooring:
Architectural Systems Inc.

Furniture
Bernhardt
Keilhauer
Knoll
Moroso
Wesnic, Inc
Herman Miller
Wesnic

Upholstery:
Anzea
Architex
Donghia
Joesph Nobel
Knoll
Maharam
Opuzen
Pallas
ArcCom

Window Shades & Drapery:
DFB Sales Inc.
Mecho Shade Systems

Lighting
Downlights:
Amerlux
3G Lighting
Juno/Indy Lighting
RSA Lighting

Task lighting:
Amerlux
Feelux
Color Kinetics
Juno/Indy Lighting

Plumbing
American Standard
Kohler
Bradley
Stone & Steel
Dyson Airblade

 
KEYWORDS: New York City

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Linda Lentz is a former editor at Architectural Record.

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