In a nutshell
Long-established store exemplifies the Patagonia mix of clothing, staff passion, activism and community activity, with sustainability credentials in a heritage, stripped-back store.
In their words
"We're in business to save our home planet. From defending wild places to championing community-owned energy, we support innovative activism that addresses the root causes of the environmental crisis and seeks to protect both the environment and affected communities."
"SoHo carries the the broadest selection of quality Patagonia gear for the whole family for snow sports, climbing, trail running, fly fishing, travel and everyday living. We occupy three floors of a six-story building known as the King of Greene Street, built in 1872 and beautifully remodeled with reclaimed materials. Check out our regularly scheduled events and meet our product savvy, environmentally active team."
Brand Background
Patagonia, established by Yvon Chouinard in 1973, is well-known for its outdoor apparel and environmental activism. The company's mission statement, "We're in business to save our home planet," reflects its commitment to environmental causes. Patagonia produces high-quality outdoor clothing and gear while implementing various sustainability initiatives. These include using recycled materials, adhering to fair labor practices, and donating 1% of sales to environmental causes. In 2022, Chouinard transferred ownership of Patagonia to a trust and non-profit organization, with the intention that profits not reinvested in the business will be directed towards addressing climate change.
Visit Field notes
It's difficult to be objective about Patagonia since they are such a well-known brand at the forefront of conscious consumption and planet-preserving activism. Their stores have long combined authentic heritage buildings that blend product display and information with in-store repair, the using omnichannel offerings and an active programme of store-as-community-hub activities - film screenings, book launches, yoga mornings. Each store's activities are a function of the brand initatives (for example its film series), the local manager's passions and the interests of the store's community.
This Soho offering is the main store, with the Upper West Side and new (2023) Brooklyn stores offering similar services and vibe. The Meatpacking store closed recently, and the Bowery branch some years ago, but Soho is still in place.
The store will be familiar to European visitors (although the Berlin store has more sparkle, and the Amsterdam store incorporates a raked bleechers-style seating area) but the focus isn't upon the "wow". For example, the repair area on the first floor has quietly disappeared but the signage throughout focuses upon materials sustainability and post-use repair and recycling.
This store is a destination if you are a brand fan, and a worthy "stop-in" if in the area. However, the store really comes alive when you talk to the staff or attend their events - the brand exists in "what it does" more than the garments hung on the racks.
Checkout
- This is an archetypal Patagonia store - full range (including climbing and luggage with some surf), in a sympathetically used heritage building
- Emotive storytelling via boards and messaging throughout the store - environmental activism and heroic exploits of brand ambassadors
- Education space that feels a bit like a community centre - drawing materials for kids, brochures and books on sustainability and community projects
- The repair station is not always in action (first floor when there)
- The store is aged compared with newer store that have auditoriums, projection areas and space used for everything from yoga to film screenings (cf their Brooklyn store or the new Amsterdam store)
- Merchandise approach is ‘one of every size and colour on display’
Other Reading
The https://eu.patagonia.com/gb/en/patagonia-nyc-soho-72-greene-street-new-york-city-ny-10012/store_soho.html on Patagonia's site.
Patagonia's activism:Â https://eu.patagonia.com/gb/en/activism/