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Truly Malaysia’s Home Retail Space, Jinan, China,
Panda Nana
DRIES VAN NOTEN LOS ANGELES STORE (2020)
We’re excited to announce Loof & Timmy’s very own pop up retail space in KENJI at Liverpool ONE from 3rd-16th May! Stop by to be one of the first to see some of our brand new merchandise in person! KENJI Website 🍞❤️🦖
Cairo shopping center in 1999, by Rüdiger Stehn. Posted to Flickr under a creative commons license.
There are now more than 30 million people without health insurance. In the past five weeks, as more than 26 million people filed for unemployment benefits for the first time, five million of them lost their health insurance. The number of uninsured is expected to rise by more than 13 million by June. On top of that, tens of millions of people with health insurance can’t afford care because of the thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs they must pay before their insurance benefits begin. Even if a person has health insurance, there may not be anywhere to go for care. Over the past 45 years, as the US population grew by over 100 million, the number of hospital beds shrunk by about 600,000. Hospitals closed in rural areas because they could not bring in enough revenue to keep their doors open. Another 453 rural hospitals are teetering on the edge of closure out of the 1,844 that remain. In cities, hospitals that served poor communities for over 100 years are being shuttered to make way for luxury housing or retail space in gentrifying areas.
Margaret Flowers, 'The Covid-19 pandemic exposes deep flaws in America’s broken healthcare system', RT
Apple and the Milanese piazza
This past July, the Apple Piazza Liberty opened in Milan. Above is a photo from the opening via Apple. There’s a band playing in the middle of the piazza.
The store is central to Apple’s vision of transforming its retail locations into “town squares.” And in this case, the store is quite literally an Italian piazza.
There’s a lot that is interesting about this store and this strategic move, as well as what this could signal about the future retail. (Curbed discusses that here.)
The urbanists who read this blog will likely lament the privatization of public space. Because at the end of the day, it is a gray area. Can I hang out an Apple Town Square all day and just read a book?
But at the same time, this is not necessarily a new idea. From the very beginning, the modern shopping mall was intended to be a new kind of town square. Or at least that’s how Victor Gruen saw it.
However, what is perhaps new is this appropriation of public spaces for the purposes of what is arguably a new kind of retailing experience -- one that almost feels paradoxical.
In the case of Apple Piazza Liberty, as well as in some of its other town squares, the actual retailing space is mostly hidden. Here it is underground. (How much to rent the basement?)
And yet, Apple’s presence feels monumental and almost sublime. Glass box, waterfall, and subtle Apple logo sitting in the middle of a beautiful Milanese piazza.
What a statement.
Image: Apple