Target/Exterior designs

From Retailpedia

P86 (1986-93)[edit | edit source]

Store offices were housed in a small mezzanine section, with opaque windows overlooking the sales floor and access provided through staircases housed within rounded-corner bump-out sections of the entrance facade structure. Staff elevator is also included near the stairwell.

P90 (1992-98)[edit | edit source]

These facades are primarily composed of sections with rounded corners, moving increasingly away from the main entrance.

P97 (1995-2000)[edit | edit source]

P01 (2000-05)[edit | edit source]

P04 (2004-xx)[edit | edit source]

2006 revision[edit | edit source]

P04 neon pieces (half-bullseye and curve) were installed above the entrances, in exchange for the white walls and hanging light fixtures featured earlier.



Likewise with P01 design stores, P04 exterior shells carried over into several P09 era builds.

P09 (2008-15)[edit | edit source]

The P09 exterior design . Compared to the P04 design it borrows from, this revision adds more detail and is more abstract than its predecessor. The

The design was carried over into P13 with no substantial changes.

Target Canada (2013-15)[edit | edit source]

"Tower" (2015-18)[edit | edit source]

Target transitioned to a tilt-up building process for this model of stores,


From this era, Target has opted to not conduct wide-scale facade renovations for stores; rather, remodels simply receive new

P17 (2017-)[edit | edit source]

Greatland[edit | edit source]

(1991-9x)[edit | edit source]

(199x-9x)[edit | edit source]

(199x-200x)[edit | edit source]


SuperTarget[edit | edit source]

P04 (2004-09)[edit | edit source]

2005 revision[edit | edit source]

The design was retained within March 2009 SuperTarget openings.

P09 (2008-11)[edit | edit source]

This iteration of the SuperTarget exterior design took a more asymmetrical approach, directing the principle facade portion with SuperTarget signage towards the grocery entrance/above café seating.