26.04.2019
Our cooperation with the Levi’s brand does not slow down. One of its latest effects is the store in the Arkady Pankrac shopping center in Prague.
It is one of the largest and at the same time youngest shopping centers in Prague, with an area of 40,000 sq m. Two other our clients – CCC and More & More already run their stores here. In addition, on three levels of the center, we can find many prestigious fashion brands such as Gant, Calvin Klein, Pierre Cardin or Coccinelle, as well as more popular like H&M, Promod, Zara or Pull & Bear.
Levi’s monobrand store offers women’s and men’s collection of the legendary brand. The Ergo Store team was responsible for retail furniture manufacturing, transport and assembly, which we made in the second decade of February 2019. For retail furniture manufacturing we used materials such as wood, plywood, steel and glass. As part of the project, we have also prepared special graphics for window displays that are part of the wall installation. It is worth mentioning that part of the store is the so-called tailor unit – a special place at which clients can order tailoring services. The store was opened to customers on March 1, 2019.
The store in Arkády Pankrác is our next production for the Levi’s brand in the Czech capital in recent months. At the end of 2018, we prepared a monobrand store in the Nový Smíchov shopping center. On the map of our productions for this American brand we can also find such European cities as Rome, Milan, Paris, Budapest, Bucharest, Glasgow and Madrid. Currently, we are preparing news stores in Spain, Greece, Germany, Ukraine and Poland. Selected productions we will soon describe on our blog.
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?