COVID-19 Slows Down Melrose Place Shopping and Selfie Scene
Stores on Melrose Place in Los Angeles experience a drop in popularity due to COVID-19.
Stores on Melrose Place in Los Angeles experience a drop in popularity due to COVID-19.
Melrose Place currently has a 10 percent vacancy rate, compared to 4 percent for West Hollywood overall, according to CBRE.
LoveShackFancy opened its biggest store yet on Melrose Place in July.
Zimmerman arrived as part of a contemporary wave on the street.
Los Angeles jeweler Irene Neuwirth is keeping her store closed for the safety of her staff.
The Violet Grey store will be shut until 2021, when it will open for private shopping only.
Rachel Comey is one of the independent female designers in the Melrose Place retail mix.
Alfred Coffee & Tea helped transform the street into selfie central, but has been slow during the pandemic.
Designer Maria Cornejo left her Melrose Place store in June after 10 years.
Marc Jacobs transformed the street into a luxury destination when he opened in 2005.
Several stores remain closed or under construction .
COVID-19 and the threat of a second closure in California has made reopening retail especially challening.
Golden Goose displays the new rules for safe shopping.
Balmain arrived on the street in 2017.
Bottega Veneta is one of the luxury players on Melrose Place.
Iro will be opening soon on Melrose Place.
The Allbright women’s social club opened its first U.S. location on Melrose Place in 2019.
Los Angeles designer Monique Lhuilier has a 4,000 square-foot flagship on Melrose Place.
Inside the chintz-chic LoveShackFancy store, which features a bridal salon.