The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Handbags gain prominence in evolving Saks Fifth Avenue

Debut of main floor in $250 million revamp of flagship a milestone.

- By Kim Bhasin and Sandrine Rastello

Saks Fifth Avenue recently debuted the new main floor of its flagship New York City store, marking a major milestone in its $250 million renovation project.

Hudson’s Bay Co.’s 41 Saks stores have been one of the few bright stars for the struggling retailer, which over the past year sold the e-commerce site Gilt, merged European operations with a rival and closed some Lord & Taylor stores. Comparable-store sales at Saks rose for the past six consecutiv­e quarters.

“I think we know the New York customer more than anybody,” said Marc Metrick, president of Saks. “We have a dominant flag- ship presence.”

Handbags will be the most prominent items at Saks, which has added 15 more fashion labels to its accessorie­s lineup, including Celine, Bottega Veneta and The Row. The remodeled main floor is about 53,000 square feetabout the size of a Whole Foodsand will be staffed by 50 handbag style advisors in addition to the store associates that sell each brand.

Manhattan is becoming a department store battlegrou­nd this year. In January, Saks closed its experiment­al women’s store just two years after it opened. Both Lord & Taylor and Henri Bendel that same month closed their Fifth Avenue stores, which had each been open for more than a century. Meanwhile, luxury rivals Neiman Marcus and Nordstrom are set to open flagships in the city in the next few months.

“I’m so thankful they both decided to come to Manhattan,” said Metrick of the competitio­n “because it gave me license to spend a quarter of a billion dollars on our store.” Saks began the overhaul in 2015, refreshing three levels devoted to women’s designer labels. Men’s shoes and a high end jewelry section in the basement called “The Vault” are next. Metrick expects to complete the project in 2021.

When done right, such renovation­s justify the cost, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce senior analyst Poonam Goyal. “There will be a lot of buzz; they’ll probably have the most expansive handbag selection in New York City on one floor,” she said. “It will be a go-to destinatio­n.”

On the ground floor, the design centerpiec­e is an escalator equipped with LED art. Designed by Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas, Metrick expects it to attract curious shoppers and make for “one hell of an Instagram moment.”

The escalator leads to the new beauty floor. Last year Saks broke with decades of tradition by moving its beauty section to the second floor, growing its size by 40 percent and offering high-end services such as face workouts and slimming massages. Stores typically keep cosmetics on the ground level to drive traffic.

Saks plans to make similar design changes — especially in the beauty section — in others stores, including Miami, Houston, Toronto and Beverly Hills. The retailer won’t necessaril­y relocate its other beauty floors, but will instead tweak existing spaces to optimize services, lines of sight and lighting.

Metrick hopes the renovation will put Saks on par with Europe’s palaces of luxury consumptio­n, such as Harrods, Selfridges, Bon Marche, Printemps and Galeries Lafayette. America’s department stores historical­ly lacked that level of extravagan­ce, he said.

“You used to walk through these stores and think, ‘Wow, this is what really grand luxury looks like,’” said Metrick. “We have that now.”

 ?? MARK ABRAMSON /BLOOMBERG ?? Saks President Marc Metrick hopes an expanded handbag collection and an escalator equipped with LED art will lure curious shoppers and make for “one hell of an Instagram moment.”
MARK ABRAMSON /BLOOMBERG Saks President Marc Metrick hopes an expanded handbag collection and an escalator equipped with LED art will lure curious shoppers and make for “one hell of an Instagram moment.”

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