Now A&F has taken retail environments even further with its new, 36,000sq.ft flagship store on Manhattan's highly competitive Fifth Avenue, enticing shoppers with a uniquely rich sound experience powered by Meyer Sound UPM-1P ultra-compact wide coverage and MM-4 miniature wide-range loudspeakers, supported by UMS-1P ultra-compact subwoofers. With the store's four high-ceilinged sales floors and stylish lighting, the precision of the sound system is critical to setting the store's club-like feel.
"Abercrombie & Fitch expects every aspect of their stores to be stimulating. They don't want anything plain and ordinary, and that philosophy definitely extends to the sound system," says David Schwartz, president of Essential Communications, the New York-based AV designer and integrator for the project. "They expect extremely high fidelity, and reliability is a key issue: it's a seven-day-a-week operation, and when you rely that heavily on a sound system, you simply can't have it go down."
The decision to use Meyer Sound loudspeakers for A&F's flagship store came about from a shootout scenario. "We were one of three companies in an exclusive group of contractors invited to the company's headquarters in Columbus, Ohio," Schwartz explains. "They told us our expectations were that this flagship store would have a precedent-setting sound system, something that had never been done before.
"One thing the executives said during that meeting was that they wanted 'theatre-like sound.' Once I heard that, it was crystal clear to me that I was going to use loudspeakers from Meyer Sound. To me, Meyer Sound and theatre are synonymous: virtually all of the Broadway houses use Meyer, for example. That, coupled with previous successful experiences using their loudspeakers, convinced me it would be a natural fit."
Things got even more interesting when the time arrived for the competing contractors to demo their systems, with all three being instructed to set up and present their systems in full view of each other within the raw confines of the store's construction site. Essential Communications' design - the only one to incorporate Meyer Sound loudspeakers -emerged as the winner.
"Everyone at the shootout, both observers and decision-makers, were almost shocked at the simplicity and performance of the system," recalls Schwartz. "They couldn't believe that we had been able to use so few speakers to create a richer sound than they had ever imagined possible. It was amazing to them that a box as compact as the UPM-1P could have an amplifier inside, but I had a lot of experience with it and knew its capabilities."
The fact that the UPM-1P and UMS-1P are self-powered loudspeakers was an important factor in the decision to include them in the initial design. "I'm a strong believer in self-powered loudspeakers," Schwartz says. "In an environment like this, they're a huge benefit because you don't have to try and drive the amplified signal over long cable runs; that's a big store, and many of those loudspeakers are quite a distance from the head end.
"The subwoofers line the north and south sides of the store, and what we wanted to do was almost create the feeling of one giant subwoofer, with a push-and-pull effect that makes the store almost feel like it's breathing. That effect is amplified by the fact that shoppers don't really know where the sound is coming from, since the UMS-1Ps are built into the store's cabinetry and camouflaged by customized grilles."
No fewer than 139 Meyer Sound MM-4 miniature wide-range loudspeakers bring full, highly controlled sound to the equation, teaming with the 45 subwoofers to make the sound