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Cocoons

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“In 2004, Rei Kawakubo, the genius behind the Japanese brand Comme des Garçons, introduced a new retail concept to London. Dover Street Market, named for its location in London’s tony Mayfair neighborhood, is a mash-up of a market, department store, and museum. Individual concessions handpicked by Kawakubo, which run the gamut from luxury labels like Lanvin and Azzedine Alaïa to the utilitarian wares of Labour & Wait and the edible goods of Rose Bakery, share space with art and design installations and the multiple labels in the Comme des Garçons fashion family. Last week, Kawakubo opened Dover Street Market in Tokyo, doubling its size and placing it squarely in the center of Ginza, the city’s shopping mecca, where venerable department stores, luxury boutiques, and the supersize flagship stores of brands like Uniqlo line the streets.


Like its sister store in London, Dover Street Market Ginza (DSMG) hews to Kawakubo’s notion of “beautiful chaos.” “I see it as the mixing up and coming together of different kindred souls who all share a strong personal vision,” says the designer who not only conceived all the spaces for her Comme des Garçons brands as well as spaces for several others labels but also curated the selection of artists, architects and set designers whose work is installed throughout the building’s six floors.”


Excerpt from “Even Bigger in Japan – Tokyo Gets Its Own Dover Street Market” by Brooke Hodge, ‘T’ The New York Times Style Magazine, March 23, 2012


Cocoons: Type Variant

Adding to the mix in the new Dover Street Market Ginza are Cocoons. Comme des Garcons originally made contact after seeing a publication of the Skating Shelters in Winnipeg, Manitoba. They requested a type variant of the shelters, as change enclosure and/or display, constructed to meet fire codes in Tokyo. The transformation required both a material change and variation of the form.

Cocoons

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