When customers enter Brunt Workwear’s flagship store in North Reading, Massachusetts, which opened last weekend, they may wonder if the contractor is still scrambling to finish the job. After all, it would be hard to miss the porta-potty perched against a wall. Or that the wall itself is made of unfinished plywood, its mill stamps still visible. Or that several empty oil barrels are sitting on the concrete floors. But for the 6-year-old workwear brand, there’s a method to the…drabness. The store, the DTC brand’s first, which is very much complete, is meant to evoke the jobsites where the brand’s core consumers—trade workers—spend their working life. “What we wanted to do was bring in materials that were familiar to our customer base,” Eric Girouard, founder and CEO of Brunt, told Retail Brew. “So that they felt at home and like [the store design] really recognized and represented where they’re spending their time on the jobsite.” The brand—which has eschewed crossing over into fashion or expanding into the pet and kids categories like workwear standard-bearer Carhartt—tapped design firm Bergmeyer, whose retail work includes Wilson’s experiential flagship in New York, to bring its showroom-cum-jobsite to life. Keep reading here.—AAN |