Thom Sweeney has opened its largest United States location to date, a 4,100-square-foot flagship at 761 Madison Avenue in New York. The two-floor space, which occupies a former Giorgio Armani boutique, marks the British tailoring house’s most significant American expansion since its founding in 2004.
Co-founders Thom Whiddett and Luke Sweeney have invested heavily in the store’s material vocabulary. Venetian plaster walls, hand-scraped oak floors, and bronze fixtures reference the British heritage of the brand while nodding to Upper East Side architectural tradition. The space was designed by London-based architect David Collins Studio.
To mark the opening, Thom Sweeney created a seven-piece capsule of handcrafted bespoke pieces available exclusively at the Madison Avenue store. The edit includes a double-breasted peak-lapel suit in a house-check wool, a suede chore jacket, and a cashmere overcoat — a concentrated distillation of the brand’s tailoring philosophy.
The Madison Avenue flagship arrives at a moment when luxury tailoring is enjoying a renaissance. The post-pandemic return to office, the rise of quiet luxury, and a generational shift toward investment dressing have all benefited houses like Thom Sweeney that sit at the intersection of craftsmanship and understatement.


