When we first heard about Puma City, the tri-level, 11,000-square-foot retail store and event space made of 24 refurbished shipping containers, we were intrigued by the popular sportswear brand’s pre-fab initiative. The portable Puma Store, which was designed by our favorite shipping container architects LOT-EK, makes clever re-use of discarded shipping containers and has been traveling around the world as a spokes-structure for both Puma and prefabricated buildings. So when we heard that the lego-esque stack, which was recently named best retail store by Travel + Leisure, would be making a stop in nearby Boston, we had to go see it in action!
Puma City Shipping Container Store Comes to Boston’s Fan Pier
by Yuka Yoneda, 05/04/09
filed under: Prefab Housing
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3 Responses to “Puma City Shipping Container Store Comes to Boston’s Fan Pier”
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Red definitely seems to be the color to go with if you decide to forego any sort of cladding; it adds a bit of sumptuousness to a volume that is decidedly hard-edged. In either event, I am wondering when shipping container prefabs will graduate to less monolithic volumes and more complex interlocking layouts.
[...] to their previous Puma City, this new one in NY is just a mini-guy, but still showcases the same quality architecture and [...]
Hi Yuka Yoneda;
I request permission to use images of the Puma City Project, in Boston, as part of a book.
Thank you and looking forward for your response
Eliud De Jesus