12/27/2007, 10:05am, EST
Thursday, December 27th
Brooklyn Apple Store location narrowed?
A new location has been suggested for Apple's long-rumored retail store in Brooklyn, New York City. Added to the list of possible sites is 345 Adams Street, a formerly city-owned plot bought for the creation of upper-class shops and restaurants. Sources in the real estate industry claim that Apple is one of several retailers considering a portion of the 40,000 square feet being made available for retail, located inside a former court building.
Competitors or possible neighbors are said to include Barney's, The Gap and Banana Republic. The site is located next to a new Marriott Hotel, and approximately two and a half miles from Apple's current SoHo store, a distance which might ordinarily deter an extra location but is more sensible in the dense landscape of New York City.
Apple already has four retail locations in the city, and is said to be building a fifth at the northwest corner of West 67th street. With six stores, New York City would easily have the most concentrated deployment of Apple retail offerings in the US, dwarfing even the offerings in Apple's Bay Area home.
Filed under: Apple
Other story tags: retail, New York City
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That reminds me- I should go to apple's request page again and post for prosoftware seminars again.
Niche stores like this might even be very useful for dense areas as mentioned above. If Apple is hiring designers/architects for a job like that, sign me up.
I just hope Apple doesn't OVERbuild stores. Yes, they're carefully targeting store sites, but still... how many successful retailers have gone on binges of store expansion only to have it drag them down later.
Even though we all know it's cheaper in the long run to own than to rent, it may not be the case here. Of course, when you stick apple's computers next to the other crap out there, it puts the rest to shame, and other names like Dell and Compaq won't be happy with dwindling sales numbers in retail stores they have contracts with.
That last bit would be the deal breaker for the in-store model. Having your own store solves any contractual problems, and we all know Apple has mone to burn right now. I wonder how far they'll take it.
and to testudo, it is brooklyn so maybe it is a vegan thing. ha. anyway, apple does have other "thin" stores already in malls. they're kind of a hassle when it gets busy but for most people who are just buying accessories or ipods, it's really convenient.