TORONTO — Andrew and Jamie Metrick, fourth-generation owners of the Toronto-based design store ELTE, approached the creative team at Burdifilex to reimagine the new home for their luxury bath and kitchen brand, Ginger’s.
The client’s vision was to move Gingers’ existing showroom to the second floor of their ELTE store in the Toronto Design District. By consolidating everything under the same umbrella, it would create a more streamlined shopping experience and ultimately become a one stop destination. The new space would introduce an extensive array of luxury branded products, reinforce their reputation for their curated collections alongside their excellent customer service.
“Each product at Ginger’s is carefully curated with our clients in mind, so in working with Burdifilek, we focused on creating a space that highlights the beauty of each piece, allowing clients to effortlessly create something that feels uniquely personal,” said Andrew Metrick.
When the team at BURDIFILEK first walked through the raw space, they were faced with a large volume of approximately 20,000 square feet. The uniqueness of the architectural envelope incited the designers to keep the integrity of the building and play with the concept of the art gallery within an industrial warehouse.
To break the large linear space, the designers used compartmentalization by creating pavilions. This helped define a primary circulation path and made it more human in scale. An attractive feature of the warehouse was the upper clerestory windows flooding the space with light. BURDIFILEK took inspiration from those windows to design the larger-than-life black metal and frosted glass frames of the pavilions. The idea behind the semi-translucent glass allows for kinetic movement, creating a sense of curiosity for what is beyond, thus eliminating any static environment but instead enticing customers to further browsing.
As a nod to the art gallery concept, the designers created monolithic sculptural displays and pedestals, at times brutalist in form and shape, casting an industrial feel with a functional and modern sensibility.
The calculated simplicity in the design allows the client flexibility to create vignettes, as well as showcase more products without overwhelming the shoppers. Most importantly it gives customers a place to pause, admire, or be wowed by the products on display.
To enhance the aesthetic and functionality of the spaces, all materiality was purposely chosen to be matte, from wood, paint, metal, to the frosted glass. Since most of the products are polished metals and high gloss porcelains, the resulting effect allows the collections to shine against the matte surfaces.
Instead of signage, colors, shapes, and forms guide customers through the various spaces. The palette is rich with touches of brick, French blue, white, and natural wood. The pop of colors on accent walls, act as a backdrop for the visual merchandising team and functions as canvases for seasonal displays and storytelling.
One of the client’s requests was to ensure that the store would have very functional consultation areas, workstations, and cash points. In these areas, all custom design tables, fixtures and working areas are created of warm wood by Mar-Tec Woodworking with complementary stone accents, fostering a welcoming feeling. To complement the natural light coming from the clerestory’s windows, BURDIFILEK used focusable lighting to highlight the individual pavilions, making the spaces warm, inviting and inspiring.
An important aspect was to ensure customers would have an intuitive shopping experience, where one can walk through the spaces and understand the product instinctively. The solution was to strategically place complementary zones adjacent to one another for a seamless shopping experience. For example, the kitchen sinks are showcased next to the kitchen faucets displays.
Rich Christianson is the owner of Richson Media LLC, a Chicago-based communications firm focused on the industrial woodworking sector. Rich is the former long-time editorial director and associate publisher of Woodworking Network. During his nearly 35-year career, Rich has toured more than 250 woodworking operations throughout North America, Europe and Asia and has written extensively on woodworking technology, design and supply trends. He has also directed and promoted dozens of woodworking trade shows, conferences and seminars including the Cabinets & Closets Conference & Expo and the Woodworking Machinery & Supply Conference & Expo, Canada’s largest woodworking show.
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