Dayton Daily News

Work out

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hasn’t made any purchases — she’s usually rushing to the class from work and anxious to get home afterward. Still, though she’s not a big shopper in general, she can see herself buying holidays gifts at Saks’ Wellery section because she’s already in the store.

Several stores have opened stand-alone locations with vast areas carved out for exercise classes and seminars. Urban Outfitters’ five-story Space Ninety 8 in Brooklyn scheduled a chakra meditation and sound bath this month.

None of the chains are talking about how much the wellness business has increased sales — or if it has. It may be soon to tell. But while clothing stores struggle, U.S. activewear sales have increased. In 2016, they rose 11 percent over the previous year to nearly $46 billion, according to The NPD Group, a consumer tracking service, and are up from $36.9 billion in 2014. So it’s no surprise retailers want to offer those customers more and keep them in the stores longer.

Saks’ New York flagship has devoted an entire floor to the 16,000 square-foot wellness sanctuary that opened in May and offers fitness classes, a salt chamber and meditation alongside other merchandis­e. Celebrity fitness guru Tracy Anderson was the marquee name on opening night. After a sweat session, fitness aficionado­s can test the latest home gym equipment like a Peloton bike, get custom-fitted for golf clubs or get their nails done — a day’s worth of selfcare in one spot.

“We need to be their sanctuary, whether they need retail therapy or want to feel good about themselves,” says Saks President Marc Metrick. “After a good workout it’s a big rush, so it’s great. We want people to feel good in our stores ... it doesn’t always have to be because you bought a killer pair of shoes.”

The Wellery is full circle for the upscale chain that constructe­d an indoor ski slope at its flagship store in 1935, and offered skiing lessons for a time as a novelty activity to bring customers in.

Before the wellness trend, department stores like Sears and J.C. Penney positioned themselves as destinatio­ns through photo studios and beauty salons. Penney has also had success with small Sephora locations inside stores.

The wellness trend taps into what analysts and retailers say is people’s desire for experience­s. Magdalena Kondej, head of apparel and footwear at Euromonito­r, characteri­zed it as “the prioritiza­tion of doing, seeing and feeling over having more stuff.”

“No one comes to the store anymore to buy something. They can do that on the phone, in the cab, at home at night ... our stores have to become much more experienti­al,” Metrick agreed.

Fitness retailers have also capitalize­d on this trend. Adidas opened its Runbase store in Berlin last year, which includes training facilities and a healthy restaurant. At Nike’s SoHo store, consumers can test a pair of sneakers on the in-store basketball court, on a synthetic football field or on a treadmill that gives real-time feedback.

Stores are also focusing on selling nontoxic makeup, vitamins and powders for skin and hair. Free People, a bohemian apparel line popular among yogis, now sells wellness products. Some of the products and clothes are included in their retreats, like a five-night retreat at Glacier National Park that starts at $1,800.

Clean beauty queen and actress Gwyneth Paltrow had a partnershi­p with Nordstrom this year for a series of pop-up shops.

Paltrow’s Goop brand curated the items, including non-toxic masks and serums, spiralizer­s for zucchini noodles, meditation pillows and yoga gear.

 ?? AP ?? Coss Marte (second from right) conducts a workout class at ConBody Bootcamp Studio at The Wellery at the Saks Fifth Avenue store in New York. The Saks store offers 1,200 different fitness classes, a salt chamber and meditation classes alongside...
AP Coss Marte (second from right) conducts a workout class at ConBody Bootcamp Studio at The Wellery at the Saks Fifth Avenue store in New York. The Saks store offers 1,200 different fitness classes, a salt chamber and meditation classes alongside...

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