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Style, squared

Union Square, the city’s fashion retail mecca, outruns the recession—and acquires some youthful cachet in the process.

By Joanne Furio, Photography by Laura Flippen

“Shopping is cheaper than a psychiatrist,” the weepy Tammy Faye Bakker liked to say, and if Union Square is any indication, we should all be in great mental health these days. Economy be damned, the square is looking strong. Nearly a dozen new style merchants have set up shop in the last year alone, inspired by Barneys and buoyed by international tourists drawn to the weak dollar—and they’ve seriously upped the area’s trend quotient.

The newcomers range from international boutiques like Britain’s Ben Sherman (fellow Brit Paul Smith and Sweden’s Filippa K aren’t far behind) to domestic trendsetters like Tory Burch and Theory (Dolce & Gabbana and True Religion have also been keeping an eye on the area). Bling is booming, too: De Beers opened in June, gold-label designers like Gucci and Prada have moved into larger, more luxurious digs, and Harry Winston is circling overhead.

But it’s not all budget-breaking couture: American Apparel (opening later this year) and H&M cater to shoppers of more modest means. Still, the emphasis of these stores—in sync with the new Union Square attitude—is flaunt-your-own-look, contemporary cool. Meanwhile, hotels around the hub have raised the bar (so to speak) on drinking and dining, with Clock Bar, Bar Drake, Bar Norcini, Level III, and Urban Tavern. After all, shoppers need somewhere other than Café de la Presse to refuel after all that bag-lugging cardio.

SHOPFRONTS

In the new 11,000-square-foot space Gucci is moving into next month, expect lots of glass, gold, and art-deco glam, in addition to that $2,000 “it” bag. 238 Stockton St.

Shoppers were perplexed when Link Theory Holdings closed its Helmut Lang shop in April, just seven months after opening, and replaced it with its tailored-hip label, Theory. 120 Maiden Ln.

Designed like an upscale home, the John Varvatos store made a splash at its May opening. Merchandise includes the designer’s claim-to-fame Chuck Taylor sneaker collection for Converse. 152 Geary St.

To appease the cultlike horde of local customers who swear by her flats, Tory Burch is opening a store here this month. 50 Maiden Ln.

S.F.-based shoe designer Joy Chen-Kolterman’s first retail store, Glory Chen, features her high-end graphic footwear on the ground floor. Deal seekers head upstairs for her lower-priced line, Joy Chen. 134 Maiden Ln.

Ferrari will sell everything but

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