28.07.2022
Another store can be added to the rich portfolio of our productions in the Balkans in 2022 – Sinsay in the TCM retail park in Mladenovac, Serbia.
Mladenovac is a town located approximately 47 km south of Belgrade. Together with seventeen other suburban units, it forms an administrative district with an area of 339 square kilometers around the Serbian capital. The TCM retail park is therefore a meeting and shopping place not only for the inhabitants of Mladenovac, but also for other nearby towns. TCM offers its guests over 8,000. m2 of retail space and 123 parking spaces. The brands present in the center include LC Waikiki, New Yorker or Takko Fashion. On July 7, 2022, the brand portfolio was enriched by the Sinsay store with an area of 832 sq m prepared by Ergo Store. Our team was responsible for retail furniture manufacturing, transport and assembly, which we carried out on June 25-30, 2022
Let us remind you that Sinsay is currently the fastest-growing brand in the LPP group in terms of the number of new stores – a large part of new shops is being opened in retail parks, the popularity of which has recently been systematically growing. We write more about the causes of this phenomenon here.
The store in Mladenovac is our next production this year for Sinsay in the Balkans. Earlier, we have prepared stores of this brand, among others in the capital of Serbia – Belgrade, the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina – Sarajevo, Croatia – Zagreb, as well as in smaller Bosnian cities such as Gracanica and Zenica.
During many years of cooperation with LPP, we have also prepared stores for it in countries such as Hungary, Germany, Finland, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Romania, Bulgaria and Poland.
24.12.2026
After a break, we have returned to Greece with a new project for the LPP Group. The result of our work is a Sinsay store produced in the city of Pyrgos. Our team was responsible for the complete fit-out of the store from A to Z – including retail furniture production, delivery, and assembly.
18.12.2025
The market is moving in two seemingly contradictory, yet in practice complementary, directions: the transformation of large-scale malls into multifunctional (mixed-use) facilities and the dynamic expansion of local retail parks. What do these changes mean for the production of commercial spaces?