Buenos Aires Shopping Center

Consumption Junction: Patio Bullrich is one of the BA malls with 100% occupancy and a waiting list.

The only thing harder to find than a parking space in Buenos Aires may soon be retail space. “It’s almost impossible to rent space in a shopping center,” reads the headline in Andres Sanguinetti’s article in today’s Cronista.

The piece focuses on retail sales, monthly rents and occupancy levels at some of the largest shopping centers in Buenos Aires, and all three trends reflect the consumption boom fueled by local demand and foreign visitors alike.

Retail sales are up 35% over last year with some 76 million shoppers packing BA gallerias like Alto Palermo and Patio Bullrich, both of which have reached 100% occupancy. It’s a similar story at Abasto, Dot Baires and Paseo Alcorta where occupancies all exceed 99%, and the majority of existing leases are set to renew next year. Most Buenos Aries shopping centers now have waiting lists for tenants and established retailers are scrambling to find larger spaces in non-traditional locations.

The pace of rental growth in Buenos Aires mirrors a larger trend in Latin America where consumption is being fueled by better access to credit, job growth and a lack of solid savings options. The retail phenomenon is analyzed further in Cushman & Wakefield’s must-read Main Streets Across the World 2011. The study lists Florida Street as the most expensive retail location in Argentina at US$100 per square foot annually or #47 of the 63 global cities surveyed. (Full Story in Spanish)

Desiderata

Desiderata helps kick off Day One of BAFWeek 2010 here in Buenos Aires. (Photo: Diego Bigolin)

The 2010 edition of BAFWeek is well underway, and the first two days have featured a wide variety of unique designs and Spring/Summer 2010/11 collections.

First up was the Semillero UBA, the sixth annual presentation of designs by rising fashion stars from the University of Buenos Aires. Desiderata showed a variety of wearable, well-tailored pieces, while vibrant colors (especially pinks and purples) and florals abounded at Juana de Arco.

A live band played as models paraded down the runway at Wanama in the casual, wearable separates the brand is known for. The day wrapped up with Grupo 134‘s designs for men with predominantly gray silhouettes.

Day 2 started off with a packed house at the jungle-influenced runway at Rapsodia, where the collection mixed vibrant patterns and colors with fringe and sequins. Next came the gorgeous Middle-Eastern -inspired collection from Marcelo Senra, where models were dressed in flowing gowns and beautifully detailed head scarves.

A monochrome palate prevailed at Kostume, where the structured black and white garments were offset by the models’ dramatic salmon lips. Blacks and whites dominated the Uma show as well, albeit in a much more feminine way, with short skirts and blazers accented by playful oversized bows that served as headpieces. The final show of the night celebrated the 10th anniversary of menswear line Hermanos Estebecorena. Models came down the runway wearing shorts and lightweight jackets in khakis and army greens with the occasional punch of black or navy.

For more on Buenos Aires fashion and designers download the new issue of InvestBA Privada and watch our BAFWeek video here.

BAFWeek 2010

Game Face: 15 Spring/Summer collections take center stage at Buenos Aires Fashion Week 2010.

The wait is over. The most anticipated fashion event of the year and one of the most prestigious in all of Latin America kicks off today in the Blue Pavilion at La Rural in Palermo. Beginning tonight at 5:00, BAFWeek 2010 will showcase fifteen Spring/Summer collections over the next three days.

The main objective of the organizers, APSA, La Nacion Eventos and La Rural, is to foster relations among the different local and international fashion and clothing industry members, as well as continue working to position Buenos Aires as one of the most important fashion capital cities in Latin America.

Some of the top designers featured over the next three days include Cook, Como quieres que te quiera, Desiderata, Grupo 134, Hermanos Estebecorena, Juana de Arco, Kostume, Marcelo Senra, S-Mode, Ona Saez, Rapsodia, Uma, VeroIvaldi and Wanama. BAFWeek will also feature 30 showrooms where event attendees can browse through a wide array of clothes, shoes and accessories.

Popular galleria Paseo Alcorta will present an award to the most creative showroom, so competition among the participants will be high. Budding designers from the University of Buenos Aires will also get a chance to showcase their talents when the Seedling runway show officially opens BAFWeek tonight. Thanks to Business Press – CI, we were invited to cover the entire event, and you can watch our BAFWeek video here.

Dot Baires Shopping Center in Buenos Aires

Shopping centers like Dot Baires are packed with locals and tourists in a buying mood. (Photo: E. Gallelli)

When we look back on 2010 in Argentina from an economic standpoint, the year will be remembered for some key trends that helped lift the country out of the doldrums of 2008/09: consumer confidence, retail spending, housing demand and the record influx of tourists, both domestic (notably BA for the Bicentennial) and international.

And while we’re still months away from closing the books on 2010, Alfredo Sainz of La Nacion says all of these factors are peaking simultaneously to send winter out with a serious bang of discretionary spending.

“The combination of low temperatures,good macroeconomic signals, purchases delayed for two years, the lack of saving alternatives and a massive flood of Brazilian tourists all combined to make the perfect recipe for winter vacations and winter 2010 in general,” writes Sainz adding, “From the shopping centers, the multiplexes, the clothing stores, the tourism agencies and the airlines, this winter season has been the most successful of the last three years.”

Retail sales are up 20-50% at Dot Baires, Alto Avellaneda, Paseo Alcorta, Abasto and Unicenter; box office ticket sales are up 65%; and the 20% bump in tourists has pushed average hotel occupancy rates to 90%. On the transportation side, Aerolineas Argentinas just announced a 30% increase in July traffic and a whopping 240% increase in traffic from Brazil.

And in a clever case of making limonada out of limoes, the country’s early exodus from the World Cup prompted TAM to divert some originally-scheduled South Africa routes down to the ski slopes of Bariloche. (Full Story in Spanish)

For more information on Buenos Aires shopping and luxury living, download the new issue of InvestBA Privada.

Buenos Aires Fashion Week

Models wear designs by Martin Churba during BA Fashion Week 2010. (AP/ Natacha Pisarenko)

Buenos Aires is the city where “shopping” is much more than an action verb for describing the favorite indoor activity of many females“shopping” is a place. In fact, BA is home to some of the largest gallerias—or shoppings—in Latin America.

BA shoppings like Alto Palermo, Paseo Alcorta, Patio Bullrich, DOT Baires and Tortugas Open Mall all feature their share of international retail outlets, but those engaging in porteño retail therapy will also find a significant number of high-end stores and successful labels launched by Argentine designers.

The highly anticipated BA Fashion Week, an annual showcase for Fall/Winter collections, is the launching pad for many of these aspiring designers. As always, this week’s event features dozens of designers showing a wide variety of unique garments and accessories like Cubreme’s coats, S-Mode’s swimsuits, Cosecha’s vintage clothing, Bienamada’s handbags and Ana Livni’s Uruguayan merino wool designs.

Not to be outdone on the global catwalk, the 2010 edition of BAFWeek is competing with Fashion Weeks in two other major fashion capitals, London & Milan. Watch our BAFWeek video here and read about the new Tortugas Open Mall in the new issue of InvestBA Privada.

 

Bariloche

Mendoza

Uruguay

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