maison-unique-reopening

La Maison Unique: a Longchamp space reimagined in the heart of SoHo

The daring vision of Thomas Heatherwick at the intersection of art, architecture and the Maison's heritage.

Longchamp's flagship store in SoHo, New York, reopened its doors on 20 April 2025 – but this was no ordinary reopening. It was a renaissance, brought to life by Thomas Heatherwick. Nineteen years after designing La Maison Unique, the British architect and designer returned to where it all began. Together with Longchamp, he has given the brand's Manhattan home a whole new story. An audacious chapter that catapults the space fearlessly into the future. Behind its façade, a feast for the eyes and a journey for the senses await. Art converses with design, heritage crosses paths with innovation. Among unseen works and iconic pieces, the Longchamp spirit inhabits every corner. This flagship destination is much more than a boutique; it is a living, breathing creative manifesto.

maison-unique-reopening

An innovative concept to match the Maison's history


In 2006, Longchamp entrusted Thomas Heatherwick with the mammoth task of designing its 100th boutique.The location? A 1936 loft at 132 Spring Street. 800 square metres of raw space just waiting to be transformed. The vision? Creating La Maison Unique, a flagship boutique that redefined the retail experience and turned convention on its head. Thomas Heatherwick responded with an architectural showstopper: a central landscape of undulating steps from the intimate ground-floor entrance to the expansive first floor. Its 55 tonnes of heat-laminated steel flow through the space in sculptural ribbons and suspended walkways, rising into the vertical void carved out of the building's core in a dramatic redesign. A skylight at the top floods the space with sun, drawing visitors in and up. Sections of the ceiling were cut and lowered to form shelving for displays. The balustrades evoke windscreens, warped and transparent. Here, architecture and the artisanal come together in a striking blend. A third storey was also added, accommodating a bright showroom and garden terrace.

In 2025, Longchamp called on Thomas Heatherwick again to reinvent this iconic destination.


The renovation was part of a wider ambition to reimagine the boutique as an emotional, sensory experience. Its new design pays tribute to the daring of 2006 while embracing contemporary sensibilities. The signature stairwell is reborn in Lumière green, the Maison's iconic colour. Its rubber steps are soft under foot, offering an almost meditative climb up this imaginary hillside. The upper storey is warm and welcoming. Green spiral rugs cover the ground and creep along pillars, as if the colour were flowing down from the ceiling. Exposed brick adds a nod to SoHo's industrial heritage. Parisian refinement is found in thoughtful touches: a croissant sofa by Raphaël Raffel, Fermob chairs at home in the Jardin du Luxembourg, curved furnishings made specially by Heatherwick Studio and oak sculptures by artist David Nash. Natural light fills this pared-back space, views open up onto the road, and the flagship's heart becomes a place of discovery. Unexpected details punctuate the experience: a green neon light depicting Longchamp's rider leaves its bright signature on a wall; graffiti by André adds personality to the bricks on the ground floor. This metamorphosis makes a brilliant statement, breathing more life than ever before into the SoHo flagship as an authentic reflection of Longchamp's creative energy. 

maison-unique-reopening