NY Construction Company - PROJECT OF THE YEAR: Retail - Ermenegildo Zegna Flagship Boutique
| Key Players
Owner: Ermenegildo Zegna, New York, Contractor: Crosstown |
For Ermenegildo Zegna, an international men’s luxury clothing and accessories brand, renovating its Fifth Avenue location in Manhattan provided the opportunity to convey the story of the Milan, Italy-based family-owned business and the principles that have guided it for nearly a century.Inspired by Zegna’s roots in the textile industry and wool mill the Italian Alps, Architect Peter Marino & Associates designed the three-level 9,200-sq-ft store as an “elegant townhouse” with features that resemble a loom in action.Construction began in May 2007 and was completed in January. Each level and room has a different use and, therefore, a different atmosphere that is best suited for the clothes and other items offered for sale. Behind a 22-ft-tall glass entryway, which boasts 900 sq ft of continuous glass, a contemporary combination of upscale finishes and materials provide both abstract and literal references to yarn, various fabric types and other signature elements of the Zegna brand. To achieve this vision, the project team needed a clean slate from which to begin. Shawmut Design & Construction had to remove a considerable amount of the existing Zegna store’s interior structure to produce the open feeling envisioned by the architect-not an easy task on a site situated on the first three floors of an eightstory early 20th Century brick building and located along one of New York City’s busiest streets. Because the store’s Fifth Avenue side was also the most logistically feasible place to move large equipment and materials into the store, we had to acquire offhours permits to place a crane that allowed us to hoist those items through the front door and an upper story window,” adds Les Hiscoe, Shawmut’s vice president of retail.
Another design element that required painstaking precision from the construction team was the plasterwork. Nineteen different plaster finishes were needed. “Design was one of continual refinement, which is typical for a flagship retail store,” Hiscoe says. “A lot of overseas travel was needed, but it helped us ensure that what the company wanted could be done.” |




For Ermenegildo Zegna, an international men’s luxury clothing and accessories brand, renovating its Fifth Avenue location in Manhattan provided the opportunity to convey the story of the Milan, Italy-based family-owned business and the principles that have guided it for nearly a century.
Among the most cumbersome items to be transported into the newly spacious interior was the store’s centerpiece design element-a two-story volumned glass and steel sculptural staircase that links the first and second floors and is illuminated by programmable color-changing lighting. Installed in two 20-ft sections the staircase is made from 5/8-in. structural glass and stainless steel rods. Similar materials were used for a smaller suspension bridge that