By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) – Italian fashion company Valentino SpA has sued the landlord of its American flagship store on Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue, seeking to void its lease because the coronavirus pandemic has made keeping the store open impossible.
In a complaint filed on Sunday, Valentino said the store, located two blocks south of Trump Tower, can no longer operate “consistent with the luxury, prestigious, high-quality reputation” of its neighborhood, as the lease contemplated.
Valentino told its landlord Savitt Partners it planned by year end to quit its lease, which began in 2013 and expires in 2029, but said the landlord wrote on Friday that it would not accept a surrender.
Savitt’s lawyer did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A spokeswoman and a lawyer for Valentino declined to comment.
The lawsuit in a New York state court in Manhattan is one of several between retailers such as Gap, H&M, Victoria’s Secret and the National Basketball Association and their Manhattan landlords after the pandemic forced store closures.
Valentino’s store is at the midpoint of a half-mile (0.8 km) stretch of Fifth Avenue from Rockefeller Center to the corner of Central Park containing many luxury retailers, with high rents.
Much of that stretch became dormant in mid-March, when New York officials closed “nonessential” businesses to curb the spread of the coronavirus.
Some restrictions were lifted on Monday, and some in-store shopping is now allowed.
But Valentino said shoppers have grown fearful of “in person, ‘non-essential’ luxury retail boutiques,” and that “even in a post-pandemic New York City (should such a day arrive)” the Fifth Avenue location was irreparably damaged.
Keeping the store open is “impractical, unfeasible and no longer workable,” it said.
On June 8, Victoria’s Secret, part of L Brands Inc
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Additional reporting by Silvia Aloisi in Milan; Editing by Dan Grebler)