by Natasha Wolff | February 4, 2020 1:30 pm
Restaurants within a store, from the French bistro Le Train Bleu that sat atop Bloomingdales for 37 years, to the reservation-required Polo Bar on East 55th Street, to Swedish meatballs served at IKEA, are not necessarily a new trend. But, as more and more shopping destinations are closing their doors, it’s become crucial for retailers to offer shoppers another reason to visit their brick-and-mortar store. In good company with other luxury retailers such as Gucci with its in-house Osteria da Massimo Bottura[1], or Armani with its own Armani Ristorante, Louis Vuitton’s newest Maison, Osaka Midosuji, recently opened in Japan[2] with their own two restaurants, the first to come from the French fashion house.
In the four-story Maison, designed by architect Peter Marino, the top floor has both of the brand’s restaurants: Le Café V and Sugalabo V. The café, with its airy terrace and cocktail bar, neighbors the secret Sugalabo V, accessed through a hidden entrance and only open to a select few diners every night.
The two eateries are run by acclaimed chef Yosuke Suga, of the popular Tokyo restaurant, Sugalabo. While we at DuJour would love to hop on a plane for a taste-test seated by Sugalabo V’s open kitchen, we’ll have to make do doing what we often do with Louis Vuitton runway collections: admire from afar.
Source URL: https://dujour.com/culture/louis-vuitton-opens-osaka-midosuji-restaurant-japan/
Copyright ©2024 DuJour unless otherwise noted.