Apple's Broadway store to open Saturday, Nov. 14
Apple has officially announced that its forthcoming flagship store on Broadway in New York City will have its grand opening on Nov. 14, in time for the holiday shopping season.
The store is located at Broadway and 67th, and Apple recently began hyping its impending opening by shrouding the glass-front store with a graphic depicting a red curtain. That same red curtain has appeared on the retail store's official Web site and on invitations sent to members of the press for the grand opening.
The company had promised the location at 1981 Broadway, which used to be home to a Victoria's Secret, would open by the end of 2009. It was originally expected to finish by Thanksgiving, but as of September that deadline was pushed back.
According to Gary Allen at ifoAppleStore, the store's unique curved glass roof design cover the rear three-quarters of the new store. The store's huge glass storefront is said to be 54 feet tall, 75 feet wide and 30 feet deep. It has been covered with black plastic, concealing the inside. Permits show that the Apple Retail outlet will include one level above ground and two below.
The sidewalk in front of the store is currently blocked off, and is under watch by security guards.
Broadway photos courtesy Gary Allen, ifoAppleStore
The location was first revealed in late 2007. The city required Apple to retain at least half of the original exterior wall for the new location. The construction reportedly cost $37.9 million.
The Broadway location will be Apple's fourth Manhattan retail outlet. Existing stores exist on Prince Street in SoHo, on West 14th Street in the Meatpacking District, and at Fifth Avenue and 59th Street. This year, the Fifth Avenue store was revealed to be the most profitable per square foot in the expensive shopping district. The store is estimated to have annual sales of more than $350 million.
In other retail news, opening this weekend is the new Apple Store at the Carrousel de Louvre in Paris, scheduled for 10 a.m. on Saturday. MacGeneration was in attendance at a press briefing at the new location, where Ron Johnson, senior vice president of Apple Retail, reportedly said that France is poised to have the fastest opening rate of stores, with the Montpellier location to open Nov. 14 and one near the Opera Ganier to debut in the summer of 2010.
More photos from the event are available from MacGeneration.
Finally, an AppleInsider reader sent word that the Apple retail store in the Mission Viejo Mall in Orange County, Calif., is set to re-open on Nov. 27. That store closed for renovations in September, after Microsoft announced it would open its own retail outlet in the same mall.
The store is located at Broadway and 67th, and Apple recently began hyping its impending opening by shrouding the glass-front store with a graphic depicting a red curtain. That same red curtain has appeared on the retail store's official Web site and on invitations sent to members of the press for the grand opening.
The company had promised the location at 1981 Broadway, which used to be home to a Victoria's Secret, would open by the end of 2009. It was originally expected to finish by Thanksgiving, but as of September that deadline was pushed back.
According to Gary Allen at ifoAppleStore, the store's unique curved glass roof design cover the rear three-quarters of the new store. The store's huge glass storefront is said to be 54 feet tall, 75 feet wide and 30 feet deep. It has been covered with black plastic, concealing the inside. Permits show that the Apple Retail outlet will include one level above ground and two below.
The sidewalk in front of the store is currently blocked off, and is under watch by security guards.
Broadway photos courtesy Gary Allen, ifoAppleStore
The location was first revealed in late 2007. The city required Apple to retain at least half of the original exterior wall for the new location. The construction reportedly cost $37.9 million.
The Broadway location will be Apple's fourth Manhattan retail outlet. Existing stores exist on Prince Street in SoHo, on West 14th Street in the Meatpacking District, and at Fifth Avenue and 59th Street. This year, the Fifth Avenue store was revealed to be the most profitable per square foot in the expensive shopping district. The store is estimated to have annual sales of more than $350 million.
In other retail news, opening this weekend is the new Apple Store at the Carrousel de Louvre in Paris, scheduled for 10 a.m. on Saturday. MacGeneration was in attendance at a press briefing at the new location, where Ron Johnson, senior vice president of Apple Retail, reportedly said that France is poised to have the fastest opening rate of stores, with the Montpellier location to open Nov. 14 and one near the Opera Ganier to debut in the summer of 2010.
More photos from the event are available from MacGeneration.
Finally, an AppleInsider reader sent word that the Apple retail store in the Mission Viejo Mall in Orange County, Calif., is set to re-open on Nov. 27. That store closed for renovations in September, after Microsoft announced it would open its own retail outlet in the same mall.
Comments
Investing many millions to make many more millions only works when the company's products are in high demand, are of substantial quality, and can be delivered in quantity.
It's interesting to see that this works in spite of so many "bad economy"-type excuses being proffered by others, and that people will happily spend money no matter how supposedly "hard" the times are.
I love the way Apple plays everything so mysteriously. Steve Jobs must be a Hitchcock fan.
My wife was in the 5th Ave store last Saturday and asked the employee when the new store would open. They said as far as they know, that store doesn't even exist!
I love the way Apple plays everything so mysteriously. Steve Jobs must be a Hitchcock fan.
MS copies Apple?s design just as Apple does a revamp of their stores? What can we expect with the decor? Usually Apple goes thinner, but to make their products look thinner they need to stick with thicker tables and countertops. The natural wood is warm. I can?t imagine what else they?d use. Anyone?
you mean-Derailment anyone?
My wife was in the 5th Ave store last Saturday and asked the employee when the new store would open. They said as far as they know, that store doesn't even exist!
I love the way Apple plays everything so mysteriously. Steve Jobs must be a Hitchcock fan.
No- that's just a not too bright emloyee which Apple seems to have more and more of these days especially in that store.
What other modern phenomenon can compare with Apple, Inc's success and expansion?!
Investing many millions to make many more millions only works when the company's products are in high demand, are of substantial quality, and can be delivered in quantity.
It's interesting to see that this works in spite of so many "bad economy"-type excuses being proffered by others, and that people will happily spend money no matter how supposedly "hard" the times are.
Microsoft?
the most profitable stock ever if you held it since IPO
Maybe French Leftist Apple.
Mapple.
Agree about the Magic mouse; form over function in this case, sadly. Too bad since the function it attempts would be so welcome if useful.
Agree about the Magic mouse; form over function in this case, sadly. Too bad since the function it attempts would be so welcome if useful.
I told you all this- the first day I went in and hand tested it myself. Especially if you have big hands. Too flat- almost like a pancake.
I told you all this- the first day I went in and hand tested it myself. Especially if you have big hands. Too flat- almost like a pancake.
teckstud actually made sense.
Merry Christmas!
I told you all this- the first day I went in and hand tested it myself. Especially if you have big hands. Too flat- almost like a pancake.
I actually agree with this also, but it's not "form over function" as Boogerman suggests.
It's a great design if you have the exact right size hands. They should just get real and make a small, medium and large size.
I actually agree with this also, but it's not "form over function" as Boogerman suggests.
It's a great design if you have the exact right size hands. They should just get real and make a small, medium and large size.
That sounds like a good idea.
It?s too bad they can?t also offer Dashboard and Exposé buttons, as well as a way to set it up as a 3-button mouse. For instance, using the Sys Prefs to dynamically create your areas for the left, middle and right click so that they best one?s particular hands and usage. Even with the same sized hands, it doesn?t mean you utilize the device in the same way. The multi-touch top makes this a very realistic possibility.
I actually agree with this also, but it's not "form over function" as Boogerman suggests.
It's a great design if you have the exact right size hands. They should just get real and make a small, medium and large size.
That's a cool idea- like footwear or gloves.
Speaking of which- do I need to cut the tips off my gloves to use my iPhone in the Winter?
I remember seeing people riding the subway last year and thought they were just a new hipster add-on but now I see they actually have a purpose!
MS copies Apple?s design just as Apple does a revamp of their stores? What can we expect with the decor? Usually Apple goes thinner, but to make their products look thinner they need to stick with thicker tables and countertops. The natural wood is warm. I can?t imagine what else they?d use. Anyone?
I think brighter and more color. Not a lot but a few tasteful accents to generally bolden the feel and make it more 'fun'. I agree that slabs of wood and minimalism will prevail but perhaps the general design will be more playful. The present tables are cool but there is scope for development with use of cantilevered surfaces, more use of metal perhaps. (No Chrome!) Most Apple products are fairly monochrome except for the ipods so some clever use of color might make the non ipod products stand out.
Can't wait to see
That's a cool idea- like footwear or gloves.
Speaking of which- do I need to cut the tips off my gloves to use my iPhone in the Winter?
I remember seeing people riding the subway last year and thought they were just a new hipster add-on but now I see they actually have a purpose!
I remember seeing a pair of gloves with 'iphone-ized' tips. They must be tight gloves (not the kind used in Canada!), but for more temperate zones?
Found these
http://www.dotsgloves.com/