You know the old certainties about death and taxes? Well, add this one: technology will advance, probably before you’ve become used to the previous versions.

I’m currently deep into research on all the design software architects and store planners are using to create their spaces. I said to one source, “Wow, that’s pretty Buck Rogers-type stuff.” The silence on the other end convinced me that people of a certain generation need to update their references if they’re going to continue talking to people of a certain newer generation.

Nobody in this industry is especially astonished anymore by AutoCAD, the set of computer programs that long ago replaced architects’ sharp pencils, drawing boards and T-squares. But what is astonishing is where computerized design has evolved in the last 15 or 20 years. Programs today now create spaces in three dimensions as well as two. And they not only render, they calculate: budgets, electrical usage, illumination levels, even how the project is shaping up for LEED certification.

Visual merchandisers can design a planogram that creates various merchandise displays for different stores, depending on the types of fixtures, width and depth of the shelf, number of shelves, perimeter or freestanding, location of the aisle, amount and type of signage required, location and type of adjacent islands or gondolas.

And, of course, all those renderings and drawings and plans and planograms can be communicated instantly around the world, so U.S. architects no longer need to roll their plans up in a case and get on the next plane to Japan. Visual merchandising executives can create a schematic and relay it instantly, and accurately, to all their stores around the country. All they need is that the store-level personnel will interpret and properly carry out those instructions. Okay, well, nothing’s perfect – technology can’t do everything.

This technology, which you’ll read about in the October issue of VMSD, has indeed revolutionized the profession of retail design – even though one designer told me, “The one piece of technology I still rely on more than any other is the lightbulb that goes on inside my head when a good idea comes to me.” Someone will no doubt come up with a program for that, too.
 

steve kaufman

Recent Posts

Von Maur Undertakes $100M Reno Plan

New, lighter look at department stores designed to put focus on the merchandise

1 hour ago

CEO Out at Banana Republic

Sandra Stangl held post at the Gap unit for three years

1 hour ago

Consumer Confidence Sputters Again in April

Concerns centered on food and gas prices

14 hours ago

Krispy Kreme Heads to Germany

Doughnut/coffee shop chain to launch in Berlin

1 day ago

Wedding E-tailer Opens First Physical Locale

Azazie Studio debuts in Beverly Hills

1 day ago

Henderson Engineers Promotes Longtime Luxury Retail Practice Director and Names Successor

National Building Systems Design firm elevates company veterans Katie Molstad and Ryan Haug

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.