COMMON VINES (2017)
Summer Street
Boston MA
800 sf
plywood, marble
Vertical plywood “fins” are arrayed to form a curved shelving wall, the primary feature of this small wine store in downtown Boston. Thin metal shelves hold display bottles, which appear to float against the wood, while stored bottles are hidden and stacked horizontally behind. The fins have a single orientation, so that as the wall curves, the relationship of displayed to stored bottles shifts. This allows both easy access for customers, and a clean display viewed from the store’s two entry points. Flexible signage is integrated with the fins, providing a natural means of organizing the wine selection, as inventory varies over time.
A central table provides additional storage, display space for tastings, and also lounge seating with a kids’ nook. Its pinwheel form suggests loose zones within the small space, while providing flexibility. As a result, the clients are able to accommodate individual shoppers, families, and also large groups for educational tastings.
Project team: GLD (Joel Lamere + Cynthia Gunadi)
View from lobby entrance. (photo: Chris Schuch)
Wine bottle shelving is reimagined as a series of vertical fins that provide natural organizational breaks between wine regions.
Storage for each sku is tucked behind oblique fins, emphasizing the bottles on display. (photo: Chris Schuch)
The curved shelving wall divides the main space and back of house service spaces. (photo: Chris Schuch)
The figure of the curved shelving wall lines the space, projecting the store’s identity and brand to the storefront. A central table adds storage and defines loose zones within the small space.
A seating nook in the central table gives kids a place to hide away while their parents shop. (photo: Chris Schuch)
View toward point of sale counter, and rolling ladder that can be tucked out of sight. (photo: Chris Schuch)
Bottles float on thin steel ledges. (photo: Chris Schuch)
The depth of the shelves is rotated 45 degrees to conceal the clutter of wine storage from frontal views.