According to BizBash, St-Germain is known for delivering a whimsical garden fantasy at its events. At the start of summer this year, the French liqueur elevated its usual aesthetic—literally—by unveiling a floating elderflower meadow.
For the third annual Maison St-Germain in New York, the brand’s summer solstice celebration, St-Germain debuted the meadow at Greenpoint Terminal Warehouse in Brooklyn. The installation was revealed at a V.I.P. event on June 20, and was then open to the public from June 21 to 23, a first for the brand’s normally exclusive fete.
The 12-ton meadow spanned 1,200 square feet, nearly the entire length of the warehouse, and featured 1,000 elderflowers, highlighting St-Germain’s tagline of having 1,000 elderflower blossoms in every bottle. The suspended installation cascaded upward and also featured a colorful floral installation, recalling the look of the previous two editions of the event.
To execute the project, St-Germain partnered with Williamsburg-based exterior design and landscaping firm ManscapersNY, which conceptualized the idea, and experiential design company the Gathery, which helmed production and design. ManscapersNY co-founders Garrett Magee, James DeSantis, and Mel Brasier are also the stars of Bravo’s Backyard Envy. Additional partners included Bednark Studio, which handled the build and engineering, and Ellen Robin Rosenberg and her team at FlowerCult, who created the elaborate floral installation.
Gathery co-founder Nicky Balestrieri, the installation’s principal designer, said the goal was to engage St-Germain’s bon vivant audience, create an installation that people had to see to believe, and create something beautiful in an unexpected place. The past two editions of the event were held in Manhattan, so this year, St-Germain brought the event to Brooklyn and, more specifically, an industrial setting where flowers normally don’t grow.
Balestrieri said the installation took two and a half days to install. Fabrication partner Bednark Studio installed the base rigging structure, which consisted of a 20- by 60-foot gridded structure, along with attached cheeseborough pipe, bent steel, and a net of chain link fence. Then, ManscapersNY created the upper tier, which featured the actual elderflower meadow.
After the structure was suspended in the air, Ellen Rosenburg and her team at FlowerCult created the floral installation with blooms such as pink delphinium, light yellow achillea, amnesia rose, and lavender. The structure was then elevated in the rear, allowing guests to observe the meadow, but also discover the floral “underbelly.”
The installation also had special meaning for the Gathery co-founders. Balestrieri said the design idea came to him when he was separated, literally, by time and space; the New York-based designer had recently been in Los Angeles working for an extended period of time. For him, the installation alluded to a space in between time and space, where he felt he and his lover could meet and find common ground, when it felt like they were living in “two alternative planes of existence.” And co-founder Luigi Tadini nicknamed the installation "Gloria," which became the installation’s go-to term.
The meadow was the centerpiece of the event, but wasn’t the only experience for guests. A day before the V.I.P. event, the Gathery created flower graffiti “growths” nearby that served as a mysterious physical path to the venue. After entering the venue through an unmarked, French-inspired door, guests walked through a floral hallway, which led to the main experience.
After observing the meadow, guests could drink St-Germain cocktails from pop-up bars in the venue and also enjoy French bistro-inspired food and a pour-over cocktail station from Pinch Food Design. Following the installation's run, all of the flowers and portions of the remaining meadow were donated to Green Thumb, a nonprofit that supports community gardens.
What an extravagant kind of display! Get inspired and devour the details of a St-Germain-inspired aesthetic for your next event!
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