
Zara expands globally with new flagship in Los Angeles and store reopening in Turin
Inditex 's flagship brand continues to grow its international retail network. Following a recent opening in Brea, California, Zara has strengthened its presence in the United States with a new flagship store in West Los Angeles. The brand also unveiled a fully renovated location in downtown Turin.
Located in The Grove outdoor mall, the store has a total area of 2,400 square meters distributed on two levels, and its design has been conceived by Zara's architecture studio, combining contemporary details that evoke the Californian spirit with the warm and welcoming style of the Spanish fashion chain.
The boutique showcases a large white façade and an interior defined by porches, wooden flooring, and gray marble. Vintage-inspired furniture—such as chairs, lamps, sofas, and even works of art and sculptures—adds character to the space. The first floor houses Zara's women's collections, including lingerie, footwear, and accessories. The second level focuses exclusively on menswear, featuring a wide range of accessories, shoes, and the brand's Athleticz sports capsule.
As part of the Galician chain's commitment to innovation, the store incorporates efficient technological tools aimed at improving the shopping experience, such as an online order collection silo with a capacity of 650 packages, self-checkout counters or automated points for online shopping returns. Additionally, as part of its commitment to sustainability, the store offers services such as a cardboard recycling point and a clothing donation container.
With this opening, the brand reaffirms its position in the U.S. market, where it first landed in 1989 with the opening of its first store on Lexington Avenue in New York. Today, Zara operates more than a hundred stores in the country and plans to continue expanding with new outlets, including the opening of a boutique in the South Coast Plaza shopping center in the Californian city of Costa Mesa, scheduled for next fall.
Consolidation in the Italian market
Zara's renovated store in Turin stands at 360 Via Roma, just a few meters from the Zara Man location that opened last year on the same prominent shopping street in the heart of the city. Reopened on May 30 after a full transformation, the boutique spans 1,124 square meters across two floors and offers the brand's women's and children's collections.
The same Zara design studio behind the Californian flagship conceived the Turin store's interior. The space reflects a warm, residential aesthetic, featuring high-quality materials and architectural elements inspired by classic design. Contemporary details—such as steel finishes and tile-adorned furnishings—add a modern contrast.
The store integrates several customer services, including self-checkout counters and a dedicated return desk. It also incorporates digital tools that enable shoppers to check in-store stock in real time and track online orders via the Zara app or website.
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The Galician chain celebrates its 50th anniversary this year and operated 1,759 points of sale by the end of 2024, including self-managed stores and franchises. The brand reports its financial results jointly with Zara Home and recorded a turnover of 27.778 billion euros in the last fiscal year, marking a 6.6% increase compared to 2023.
Zara forms part of the Inditex group's brand portfolio, which Marta Ortega currently chairs. The group also includes Massimo Dutti, Bershka, Stradivarius, Pull&Bear, Oysho, Zara Home and Lefties. The Galician conglomerate posted a 7.5% increase in the same period, reaching total sales of 38.632 billion euros.

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Euronews
6 hours ago
- Euronews
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Euronews
10 hours ago
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Italians will begin voting on Sunday in a referendum on whether to relax citizenship laws, but there are fears that turnout will be so low that it will invalidate the result. The two-day referendum, ending on Monday, will also ask voters if they agree with reversing a decade-old liberalisation of the labour market. The labour market questions aim to make it more difficult to dismiss some employees and increase compensation for workers who are made redundant by small businesses, reversing a law passed by a Democratic Party (PD) government around a decade ago. But it's the question about citizenship which has attracted the most attention among Italian voters. Concerns about the scale of immigration helped push Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's far-right Brothers of Italy party to power in 2022. Italians will be asked if they support the idea of reducing the period of residence required to apply for Italian citizenship from 10 years to five. 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Euronews
a day ago
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Europe's right caught in wake of broken Trump-Musk bromance
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Meanwhile, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who was present at the White House during part of the unfolding dispute between the pair, hasn't commented, though his CDU party competes directly with the AfD and is likely watching developments closely. Italy's Lega and its leader Matteo Salvini face a similar dilemma but from a slightly different angle. Salvini has long styled himself as Italy's most pro-Trump figure, even more so than his rival Giorgia Meloni. Yet Musk has also courted Lega. In April, he addressed the party's national congress in Florence via video link as a star guest, echoing his involvement with the AfD. For Meloni, the situation is even more complex as she has cultivated relationships with both men. As the first Western European leader to meet Trump following the announcement of US tariffs on EU goods, she positioned herself as a diplomatic bridge between Washington and Brussels. At the same time, she has maintained a pragmatic, deal-oriented relationship with Musk, particularly regarding potential SpaceX contracts for Italian defence communications. Despite their ties to Musk and shared ideological overlaps, both Meloni and Salvini are likely to side with Trump in the event of a political schism since Trump remains a key political ally and, unlike Musk, is an elected leader. In other parts of Europe, the choice appears clearer. Parties such as Hungary's Fidesz under Viktor Orbán and France's National Rally, now led by Jordan Bardella, have consistently aligned themselves with Trump's nationalist agenda. Orbán, one of Trump's closest allies in Europe, frequently echoes his anti-immigration rhetoric and strongman leadership style. Bardella has praised Trump's patriotism and nationalist policies, while showing little public admiration for Musk. 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The research interviewed 8,625 people from these six key Western European countries between November 2016 and May 2025. Net favourability towards Israel in Germany (-44), France (-48), and Denmark (-54) has reached its lowest level since YouGov started tracking in 2016, while public sentiment in Italy (-52) and Spain (-55) are likewise at their lowest or joint lowest levels, despite a shorter timespan from 2021 onwards. A number of Europeans across these six countries think Israel was right to send troops into Gaza, but believe they have since gone too far and caused too many civilian casualties. This opinion won the most support in Germany at 40%, followed by Denmark at 39% and Britain at 38%. Israel's military campaign has killed more than 54,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, according to Gaza's Health Ministry. Food supplies have also been blocked, with the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC)'s latest report stating half a million people face starvation. Between 7% and 18% of European respondents say they sympathise most with the Israeli side, the lowest figure in most countries since the Hamas attacks. By contrast, between 18% and 33% say they sympathise more with the Palestinian side. Only in Germany are the figures for each side similar, with 17% for Israel and 18% for Palestine. Despite permanent peace in the Middle East seeming distant to Europeans, French people are the most optimistic that both sides will set aside their differences within the next 10 years. Meanwhile, Danes are the least optimistic at 15%. Across all countries, the opinion that peace is realistic has fallen in popularity by between four and ten percentage points.