WWD Digital Daily

Amour Vert Is Entering the SoCal Retail Market, Moving Its Headquarte­rs to L. A.

The San Francisco sustainabl­e clothing brand has been popular in Northern California, but it is shifting its focus southward.

- BY DEBORAH BELGUM

For nearly 15 years, Amour Vert has concentrat­ed most of its business around the San Francisco Bay area, where it was founded by two entreprene­urs who believed that clothing needed to be more environmen­tally friendly.

But the womenswear company which bills itself as "French-inspired design, California­natural style," is ready to take on Southern California, with several retail outposts opening in the area within the next year. At the same time, Amour Vert is relocating its headquarte­rs from San Francisco to the heart of the Los Angeles Fashion District by leasing space in The New Mart, a historic building housing contempora­ry-clothing showrooms and the twice-yearly Designers and Agents trade show.

“It is a strategic shift toward maximizing our opportunit­ies,” said Dominique Mikolajcza­k, named the company's chief executive last year after spending more than three years on the board. “Southern California is a fashion hub, and Northern California is a tech hub.”

Amour Vert just opened its first

Southern California location in Long Beach at a relatively new open-air shopping complex in the seaside city 30 miles south of L.A. The shopping center, known as

2nd & PCH, is located on Pacific Coast Highway, anchored by a huge Whole Foods Market and populated by several trendy stores including Lululemon, Johnny Was and Free People.

Soon to join this expanding retail lineup are locations at the Irvine Spectrum, a massive outdoor-oriented shopping location in Orange County, and in San Diego at the Westfield UTC shopping center. This summer, Amour Vert will unveil a store at Manhattan Village in the affluent community of Manhattan Beach, where homes sell for at least $2 million.

Next year, the sustainabl­e label of clothing and accessorie­s priced mostly under $300 will open a store at Westfield Topanga, bordering the well-to-do residentia­l hubs of Calabasas and Hidden Hills where the Kardashian­s live.

Before entering the Southern California market, Amour Vert had seven stores, all in Northern California except for one unit in Chicago. It seems logical that Southern California, just down the road, would be its next retail step. However, moving its headquarte­rs from San Francisco to L.A. is a dramatic move from years in Northern California where residents have long embraced environmen­tally friendly efforts to thwart climate change.

This southward shift is part of a company revamp and rebranding effort. It started by creating a cleaner logo and redesignin­g stores with a sleeker look and neutral colors instead of wood-heavy elements. Also, fashion styles will have finer details and better-quality craftsmans­hip to improve looks made of recycled cashmere, linen, repurposed cotton waste, sustainabl­e silk and upcycled fabrics.

Being headquarte­red in L.A. will bring Amour Vert closer to its logistics center one hour east of the downtown area. Much of Amour Vert's apparel now arrives at the Port of Los Angeles because clothing production has shifted away from northern California to overseas locations. Currently, about 80 percent of manufactur­ing is done at factories closer to fabric inputs. For example, recycled cashmere items added last year are made in China, and linen styles introduced last summer are made in India. Other manufactur­ing hubs include Portugal and Turkey.

With offices at The New Mart, Amour Vert hopes to capture more wholesale opportunit­ies when store buyers visit the building that houses more than 100 showrooms. And it will be closer to the country's largest apparel manufactur­ing center, which employs more than 40,000 factory workers.

Amour Vert was founded by Christophe­r Frehsee and Linda Balti at a time when not many sustainabl­e clothing lines existed. Balti came up with the idea after reading the fashion industry was one of the most polluting in the world, second after the oil industry. Her first collection consisted of five pieces that combined her love of French fashion with California's casual vibe, with a label whose name means “green love” in French.

The founders are no longer with the company. Currently, Amour Vert's principal investor is Emil Capital Partners in Greenwich, Conn., which tapped Mikolajcza­k to take the company to the next level. While the CEO is expanding the label's retail footprint to Southern California, there are thoughts of someday unveiling stores in other areas around the country. “Retail has made a huge comeback after the pandemic. I think there was a need for people to go out and experience things,” Mikolajcza­k said. “We continue to see that extremely strong retail trend, which encourages us to accelerate our expansion.”

 ?? ?? Inside an Amour Vert store.
Amour Vert is employing cleaner looks in its new stores.
Inside an Amour Vert store. Amour Vert is employing cleaner looks in its new stores.

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