A Shopping Guide · Summer 2026

SoHo

Below Houston, in the cast-iron district — the flagships that turned loft buildings into theater, the cult downtown originals, and the concept shops you’ll find nowhere else. A few favorites sit a step beyond, in NoLita and NoHo.

With the compliments of the concierge desk

The Fifth Avenue Hotel  ·  Compiled June 2026

SoHo packs hundreds of stores into a handful of cobblestone blocks; this is a curated walk, not a directory — the brands with a true sense of place and the one-of-a-kind finds, with the ubiquitous chains set aside. Several picks sit just past SoHo’s edges, in NoLita, NoHo, and on the Bowery, and we’ve said so. Hours shift and downtown turns over quickly; our concierge desk is glad to confirm before you set out, or to arrange a car.

Below Houston

The Cast-Iron Flagships

Big names that made theater of the loft buildings.

Prada

575 Broadway
Milan At Prince Street. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
Rem Koolhaas’s downtown “Epicenter”

Prada’s SoHo store was conceived less as a shop than a manifesto: architect Rem Koolhaas and his firm OMA cut a great swooping wood wave through two floors, with a stage-like sunken “pit” and glass elevators. Two decades on, it remains the most architecturally ambitious flagship in the neighborhood — worth a look even if you buy nothing.

Louis Vuitton

116 Greene Street
Paris On Greene, the luxury stretch. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
Luxury in the cast-iron canyon

Greene Street holds the densest run of cast-iron façades on earth, and Vuitton’s SoHo flagship makes the most of one — soaring columned windows framing the full sweep of leather goods, ready-to-wear, and seasonal collaborations. The downtown counterpart to the Fifth Avenue maison.

Canada Goose

101 Wooster Street
Toronto · since 1957 On Wooster, between Prince and Spring. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
A taste of the Canadian cold

The parka-maker’s first US store leans hard into its home country — soft maple benches, raw British Columbia marble, polar-bear sculptures, and, famously, a chilled “cold room” to test a jacket before you brave a real winter. A flagship that sells climate as much as clothing.

Uniqlo

546 Broadway
Japan The Broadway global flagship. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
The cult of the perfect basic

Uniqlo chose Broadway for its first store outside Japan, and the global flagship is still a pilgrimage for devotees of its Heattech layers and impeccably plain knits — three floors of Japanese precision applied to the everyday.

Below Houston

New York Originals

The cult brands that grew up downtown.

Kith

337 Lafayette Street
New York · since 2011 Corner of Lafayette and Bleecker — NoHo’s edge. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
Ronnie Fieg’s streetwear cathedral

From a single sneaker boutique, Ronnie Fieg built Kith into a downtown institution. The three-story Lafayette flagship — walnut, marble, and herringbone floors — anchors the brand, and its Kith Treats cereal bar, all quilted steel and silver mosaic, serves house blends to a near-permanent queue.

Aimé Leon Dore

214 Mulberry Street
Queens, NY · 2014 On Mulberry, in NoLita. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
A label — and its Greek café

Teddy Santis’s ALD distills uptown prep and ’90s New York into one of the city’s most-watched labels. The Mulberry flagship comes with the attached Café Leon Dore — gold, marble, and tile, a Freddo Cappuccino, and a crowd that treats the whole thing as a lifestyle. Just off SoHo proper, in NoLita.

Supreme

190 Bowery
New York · since 1994 In the old Germania Bank, at Spring. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
Skate culture in a Beaux-Arts bank

The most influential streetwear label of its generation trades from the landmarked 1899 Germania Bank Building — a granite Beaux-Arts pile once filled with artists’ lofts. The clothes can feel almost beside the point; this is the cultural anchor of downtown skate style. On the Bowery, at SoHo’s eastern edge.

Saturdays NYC

31 Crosby Street
since 2009 On Crosby, with a backyard patio. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
Surf shop, café, secret garden

Part menswear label, part surf shop, part coffee bar — Saturdays opened in 2009 as downtown’s improbable surf headquarters. Order a La Colombe espresso at the front counter, browse the boards and the knitwear, then slip out to the planted back patio, one of SoHo’s loveliest hidden courtyards.

Below Houston

Concept & Beauty

Multi-brand visions and a fragrance lab.

The Webster

29 Greene Street
Miami import Six floors of cast iron on Greene. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
A luxury walk-in closet, vertically

Laure Hériard Dubreuil’s Miami-born concept took a landmarked 1878 cast-iron building and spent four years turning it into a six-floor “closet” — a tightly edited mix of Chanel, Loewe, Saint Laurent, The Row, and more, with a David Mallett salon and an Augustinus Bader skin lab in the floors above. Browse it like a gallery.

Glossier

72 Spring Street
New York At Spring and Sixth. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
The beauty brand, back where it began

The internet-born beauty label returned to SoHo — where it first found its following — with a flagship built as a love letter to the subway: mosaic-tile murals from the studio behind the real stations, barrel-vaulted ceilings, a communal testing table, and a “You Look Good” room with a platform bench made for photographs.

Le Labo

233 Elizabeth Street
Hand-blended, NYC On Elizabeth, just below Houston — NoLita. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
Fragrance, mixed to order

Push through the heavy iron gate into Le Labo’s original New York shop — a scuffed, clubby apothecary where each scent (the famous Santal 33 among them) is blended by hand on the spot and labeled with your name and the date. A few doors into NoLita, and worth the half-block.

Below Houston

Design, Objects & Books

Where downtown keeps its eye — and its reading list.

MoMA Design Store

81 Spring Street
MoMA On Spring, between Crosby and Broadway. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
The museum’s gift to good design

Reopened in 2025 inside a restored 1880s cast-iron building, the museum’s downtown store is a curated trove of design objects, gifts, and reissued classics, all vetted by MoMA’s curators. Nina Chanel Abney’s bright “LOVE NYC” mural, visible from Spring Street, anchors the room.

Muji

455 Broadway
Tokyo · no-brand On lower Broadway. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
The quiet pleasure of no-brand

Muji — from a Japanese phrase meaning “no-brand quality goods” — turns restraint into a philosophy: unbranded stationery, modular storage, soft basics, and clever household objects in calm, neutral tones. A meditative antidote to the avenue’s noise.

Housing Works Bookstore Café

126 Crosby Street
since 1994 · for charity On Crosby Street. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
Books, coffee, and a cause

A beloved, volunteer-run used bookstore where the shelves are stocked entirely with donations and every dollar funds Housing Works’ fight against homelessness and AIDS. Café by day, event space by night — the Moth has slammed stories here — and one of the most charming rooms downtown.

Dashwood Books

33 Bond Street
Photography · since 2005 On Bond Street, in NoHo — buzz to enter. Website Map (Google) Map (Apple)
New York’s photography bookshop

Down a short stair on Bond Street, founder David Strettell — once cultural director of Magnum Photos — keeps the city’s only bookstore devoted entirely to photography: contemporary monographs from Europe, Japan, and the States, plus Dashwood’s own limited editions. A pilgrimage for the photo-book set, just over the line in NoHo.

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