flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Porsche’s next-gen showroom prototype opens in Palm Springs, Ca.

Retail Centers

Porsche’s next-gen showroom prototype opens in Palm Springs, Ca.

The dealership is the first to showcase Porsche’s new design philosophy, ‘Destination Porsche.’


By David Malone, Associate Editor | March 19, 2019
Exterior of Porsche Palm Springs

All photos courtesy indiGo Auto Group

Described as the first-of-its-kind, Porsche Palm Springs was designed to provide customers with architectural and tech-immersive elements that offer an exclusive Porsche experience.

Sitting on a 2.7-acre lot, the 45,000-sf facility will offer 30% to 40% more inventory than the old dealership. The LEED-certified building uses solar power and is will service and recharge the new Porsche Taycan, the brand’s first all-electric vehicle.

 

Destination Porsche design interior Palm Springs

See Also: Porsche Design Tower is, unsurprisingly, a car lover’s dream

 

The showroom was designed with distinctive environments to reflect each model offering such as the 911, Cayman, and Cayenne. Customers enter the facility and follow a walkable road that leads them through the building to the distinct vehicle environments. The environments create experiences via audio, visual (Porsche Palm Springs includes 12 digital screens, two of which measure 16’x9’), and virtual reality elements (VR allows customers to virtually experience their own car configuration before purchase), and are easily adaptable. A walkable bridge on the second floor mimics one found in Stuttgart, Germany where Porsche vehicles sit on a moving conveyor belt that transfers them to the next stage of assembly.

 

One of the unique model environments

 

The showroom includes the Porscheplatz social space, an area that offers various seating arrangements, a café, and a Kids Corner. The second floor features Werk 1, a lounge that can be used to host events. The expanded service department comprises 16 service bays, two electric bays, and indoor hand wash bays. Visitors are able to look into the service workshop via a large window while waiting.

 

Large window with view into the service bays

 

Porsche Palm Springs marks the prototype for Porsche’s new corporate architecture philosophy. The concept, dubbed Destination Porsche, looks to turn the dealership into a central gathering place for the Porsche community. The final concept will follow by mid-2020 with two dealerships currently underway, one in Dortmund Germany and one in Hangzhou, China.

The Palm Springs showroom is the result of a partnership between Porsche and indiGO Auto Group, a luxury automotive dealer with 15 franchised dealerships across five U.S. markets. Whitfield Associates, Inc. designed the project.

 

Porsche Palm Springs interior Destination Porsche

Related Stories

Mixed-Use | Apr 24, 2017

Take a look at Brooklyn’s Domino Sugar Refinery redevelopment

The master plan features market-rate and affordable housing, mixed-use space, and a waterfront park with a 5-block long “Artifact Walk.”

Market Data | Apr 13, 2017

2016’s top 10 states for commercial development

Three new states creep into the top 10 while first and second place remain unchanged.

Mixed-Use | Apr 7, 2017

North Hollywood mixed-use development NoHo West begins construction

The development is expected to open in 2018.

Urban Planning | Mar 31, 2017

4 important things to consider when designing streets for people, not just cars

For the most part what you see is streets that have been designed with the car in mind—at a large scale for a fast speed.

Retail Centers | Mar 23, 2017

The retail renaissance part I: How architecture will shape the future of shopping

The retail sector is charting unfamiliar territory as web sales and evolving tastes force a paradigm shift. In our Retail Renaissance blog series, architects, interior designers, planners and engineers from different GS&P markets will consider the impact of retail trends and discuss how clients and developers can successfully navigate this new age of shopping.

Retail Centers | Mar 9, 2017

When everyone shops online, what happens to mixed-use retail?

NBBJ’s David Yuan explains how changing retail trends are creating new opportunities for urban experiences and public space. 

Retail Centers | Mar 7, 2017

Five facets of successful retail that further social connection

What’s driving experiential retail in 2017 and beyond?

Retail Centers | Jan 24, 2017

Sensational shopping: Retail and the emotional connection

CallisonRTKL's Bret Wiggins discusses how to design the retail environment in a way that taps into the shopper psyche.

Retail Centers | Dec 23, 2016

Wayfinding trends: Modern digital signage caters to personal tastes and profiles of shoppers

Applications like Bluetooth-driven Beacon systems and cellular Wi-Fi systems can now be used to help people navigate space in a more profound way, writes CallisonRTKL’s Cody Clark.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Adaptive Reuse

Empty mall to be converted to UCLA Research Park

UCLA recently acquired a former mall that it will convert into the UCLA Research Park that will house the California Institute for Immunology and Immunotherapy at UCLA and the UCLA Center for Quantum Science and Engineering, as well as programs across other disciplines. The 700,000-sf property, formerly the Westside Pavilion shopping mall, is two miles from the university’s main Westwood campus. Google, which previously leased part of the property, helped enable and support UCLA’s acquisition.




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021