The 36th edition of 080 Barcelona Fashion was held on October 14-17 in the Catalan capital. The organisers, staging Barcelona’s fashion week at its customary venue for the last time, were able to draw on a budget of €2.15 million, including a grant from the municipality of Barcelona. Where will 080 Barcelona Fashion go from here, and what are its future challenges? Marta Coca, the event’s top executive, has talked to FashionNetwork.com about all this.
Marta Coca, head of 080 Barcelona Fashion – 080 Barcelona Fashion
FashionNetwork.com: This was the last edition of 080 Barcelona Fashion to be held at the Sant Pau Art Nouveau site. How is the search for a new venue going?
Marta Coca: We’re looking at a couple of options. Both need some interventions, and we’re evaluating them in order to assess if we can get everything done by next April. We want a completely different style from the last editions, where modernism was the stand-out feature. We’re looking for a venue that, while different, will still be identifiably Barcelona.
FNW: What are the venue’s key requirements?
MC: Capacity is one of them. In addition, we’d really like to be able to use both indoor and outdoor spaces, so that people can enjoy an outdoor area for a breather between shows. We’re keen on a venue with enough capacity for our audiences, but also with outdoor space they can enjoy, and where they’ll be able to network between shows.
FNW: A few months ago, you announced, among other things, that the municipality of Barcelona would join forces with 080 Barcelona Fashion. What form has this support taken?
MC: In this edition, it came as a small financial contribution. We don’t want to say the Municipality is an investor, we’d rather talk about a partner that will help us grow. This collaboration, on the one hand, takes the form of a financial contribution to boost content and communication at the venue where we’re staging 080. On the other, it’s aimed at organising other initiatives across the city during the fashion week. In other words, making Barcelona sparkle with fashion.
FNW: How are you planning to achieve this?
MC: We must devise the best possible format to make the event last five or six days at most, enabling us to continue to attract buyers, the media and stakeholders. The idea is that the partnership won’t be only financial, but will be characterised by a scalable project and a ubiquitous fashion presence in Barcelona, involving different areas of the city: There will be initiatives tailored to industry players, others for stakeholders and for the general public, like the Open Area we introduced this year.
We wholeheartedly believe that fashion is culture and that, if we want our brands to sell at the prices they need to sell for, we have to work on consumer education, acting as a public platform and an echo chamber. Conveying the notion that fashion has a price, that it’s not about consuming a lot, but about consuming well and making quality choices. And we must make sure Barcelona people are in love with fashion just as they are in love with art.
FNW: This was 080 Barcelona Fashion’s 36th edition. How do you see it evolving in the medium term?
MC: We see ourselves as a promoter of alliances, both locally and internationally; we see ourselves still doing what we’re doing now, while paying attention to trends and how markets are evolving. Barcelona has a fashion dimension, in aesthetic terms, but we also have brands that are linked with a social, ethical and political dimension. 080 closely monitors what’s happening around us.
We’ll continue to be obsessed with integrating artisanal techniques into our collections, because this will make us stand out, creating a DNA specific to Catalan fashion. Of course, sustainability is crucial too. No matter how long it will take for EU [sustainability] policies, including recycling and extended producer responsibility, to be deployed on the ground, we want to prepare society and brands so that they’ll be ready to incorporate them when the time comes.
FNW: What about internationalisation?
MC: For us, it’s a must. The local market is very important, but our brands, especially emerging ones, need us to help them find their niche in the global arena.
FNW: In this respect, what formulas are you planning to explore?
MC: Besides reverse missions, i.e. bringing stakeholders to Barcelona during the fashion week, we’re planning to organise commercial missions abroad. Next year, for example, in collaboration with Catalan fashion hub Modacc, we will travel to India, a fast-growing market worth exploring. Certain markets have a medium to long-term potential: In such cases, we’re aware that return on investment is not immediate, but we believe that, as a public platform, it’s where we ought to be.
Beyond this, and as a way to boost the 080 brand’s visibility, pop-up stores are very effective internationally, almost better than showrooms and trade shows. With a pop-up format, you can reach both industry buyers and consumers. A pop-up approach, clustering several brands together under the Barcelona or Spanish fashion umbrella, is working very well. Of course, you have to choose the right cities, and not every brand will fit in every market, so you have to segment very carefully.
FNW: A plan like this goes beyond the event itself. You’re set to develop these initiatives throughout the year, aren’t you?
MC: Indeed. Though we call ourselves a fashion week, we think of ourselves as a platform. We know there two key moments in the year, April and October, but we work closely with brands, and we’re engaged in a constant conversation with them throughout the year. We’re chiefly working on the local market for now, but the idea is to produce 080 content with a global reach. We need to de-seasonalise our platform because each brand has its own calendar, and business models differ considerably. We have ready-to-wear and couture brands, others working on a pre-order basis, etc. We must be willing to let all kinds of business model and companies of all sizes have space on our platform, as long as we see potential in them.
FNW: In recent years, 080 Barcelona Fashion has been attracting designers and brands that were previously showing in Madrid, such as Moisés Nieto, Carlota Barrera, Acromatyx and Ernesto Naranjo. Why do you think this is happening?
MC: There are brands coming from Madrid, others from Valencia and other cities. I think this is happening because they see that 080 is doing well, and that growth doesn’t happen overnight. We’ve had a very clear strategy for several editions, and we’re gradually putting resources and effort into it, consolidating ourselves.
We’re also building a community. Everyone is talking about communities nowadays, but it’s actually something that 080 has been focused on for a long time. In addition, we’re talking about brands whose global audience is quite concentrated, and we have the ability to serve them. In any case, some platforms are complementary: There are brands in Catalonia that may be more interested in what Madrid has to offer, like access to the [Spanish] or Latin American markets. Hopefully, they don’t regard us as competition, the point is that there are two big cities in Spain, Madrid and Barcelona, with two unique platforms that, with their offerings, are able to cater to the whole market.
FNW: 080 has pioneered giving visibility to emerging talent. Is this a well-established approach?
MC: We’re continuing along this path. In fact, a member of my team specialises in scouting new brands, so that our calendar can feature a hybrid mix of styles and a multi-generational outlook. Our idea is that new voices should account for about 20% of the brands featured in each edition. We’re also introducing new business models. Not every brand is keen to show twice a year, or to work on a seasonal basis. Many brands, especially emerging ones, produce one collection per year, and integrate it with regular drops. We think this is fantastic.
No way forward. After a decade of uninterrupted growth, the luxury fashion sector has hit a wall. Global sector revenue was estimated at €364 billion in 2024, compared to €369 billion in 2023, showing the limits of a business model based on constant price increases.
Luxury sector players are faced with worsening results – Divulgação
In the face of this slowdown, luxury labels need to rethink their strategies to maintain their appeal, and their margins too, according to a study by Lectra based on figures from its Retviews data analysis solution.
Market in midst of strategic redefinition
Price increases, often hard to justify, in luxury products, have been stemmed by economic stagnation and dwindling consumer purchasing power. This paradigm change is forcing luxury labels to reconsider their strategies. “The current luxury market slowdown is a turning point for labels. They must now rethink their strategies, which had until now been price-centred,” said Antonella Capelli, president EMEA at Lectra.
Labels are reducing their leather goods assortment, especially for cheaper products – hermès.com
The Lectra study revealed two diametrically opposed strategies. Some labels are concentrating on the ultra-luxury segment, targeting a highly specific clientèle that is less susceptible to economic fluctuations. Others, like Louis Vuitton, Miu Miu and Prada, are trying to appeal to a new clientèle by tweaking the prices of their entry-level products.
Leather goods a desirability linchpin that needs to be optimised
In this uncertain environment, leather goods, and especially handbags, are still a mainstay in the market positioning of luxury labels. These iconic items continue to attract an extensive clientèle. Retviews figures show that China is the country where these products are selling at the highest prices, generating margins of several hundred euros per item for labels like Gucci and Prada.
China is the goose that lays the golden eggs for international luxury labels – Retviews/Lectra
Luxury labels are adjusting their assortment strategies in order to protect their high-end image and their profitability. One of their tactics, identified by Lectra, is withdrawing from the market models that are similar but less expensive, to prompt consumers to opt for their higher-priced counterparts. Luxury leather goods are therefore becoming even more expensive. A second approach observed by Lectra is product range streamlining: Bottega Veneta’s Jodie handbag went from five to three sizes in 2024. By the same token, Bottega Veneta has stopped selling its smallest model, the Candy Jodie, aligning with the current trend away from mini handbags in favour of larger models.
Handbag charms emerging as new consumer bait
As the handbag market is rebalancing, a new accessories trend is emerging: handbag charms. These very small leather goods are playing a key role, becoming a new gateway into the world of luxury goods for budget-conscious consumers.
Luxury labels are choosing between ultra luxury and more affordable products – N°21 x Scholl
This new direction has been adopted both by affordable premium brands like Coach or COS and by more upmarket labels, which are developing their collections with a price positioning reflecting their status. Retviews confirmed this phenomenon by observing a whopping 51% growth between 2024 and 2025 in the presence of handbag charms and keyrings in luxury labels’ assortment, a growth rate at odds with the decrease observed in other accessories categories.
Jean-Charles de Castelbajac will stage a mammoth retrospective in Toulouse, entitled ‘L’Imagination au pouvoir,’ or ‘Imagination at work,’ to be presented in the French city’s Les Abattoirs Museum.
Bettina Rheims, Ghislaine Thesmar, and dancers from the Ballet de l’Opéra de Paris, Spring-Summer 1982, “Homage to Comic Books” collection – Bettina Rheims / Adagp, Paris, 2025
This important compilation of fashion, accessories, design, collages, and fine art works by one of France’s great iconoclastic creators will be staged in Toulouse from December 12 to August 23, 2026.
The exhibition brings together nearly 300 works, including clothing, design objects, drawings, and photographs, retracing six decades of creation by a visionary artist who pioneered the breaking down of barriers between art, fashion, and popular culture.
Jean-Charles de Castelbajac and the paraments designed for the reopening of the Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, 2024 – Philippe Garcia
L’Imagination au pouvoir offers an immersive journey, punctuated by an original composition by Vladimir Cauchemar, and highlights the artist’s iconic collaborations—from Keith Haring to Robert Mapplethorpe, Lady Gaga to Malcolm McLaren—as well as de Castelbajac’s recent works created for Notre-Dame de Paris.
“Starting in 1980, I began using the primary colours red, blue, and yellow, the banners of pop culture, as well as logos, cartoons, and slogans, as a contemporary response to my passion for medieval heraldry and history. This limited colour palette became my signature, a stylistic imprint, a link between all my creative experiences, from my pop knitting work, the beginnings of streetwear, to sacred art at the 1997 World Youth Day and the reopening of Notre-Dame de Paris in 2024,” said 75-year-old Jean-Charles in a release, referring to the official vestments he created for the clergy for the reopening of the legendary cathedral. Examples of which feature in the retrospective.
“Elektrocute” fashion show, Autumn-Winter2007-2008 – Guy Marineau
Among the iconic images in the exhibition are his famed teddy bear coats from 1988, one of which was worn by Madonna; and the graphic sequined column-dress from 1985 that read, “Je suis toute nue en dessous,” in English: “I am fully naked underneath.”
It also features portraits by Oliviero Toscani of Andy Warhol and Vivienne Westwood wearing de Castelbajac creations. All the way to historic objects, from his multi-coloured rainbow moccasins for Weston to his collectors’ item Totem lamps.
It’s not just major UK shopping centres that are enjoying strong letting percentages. As part of its ongoing repositioning, Northern France’s Les 3 Fontaines has now fully pre-let 110,000 sq ft of outstanding retail space, operator Hammerson said.
Image: Hammerson
The final unit has been signed for a Nike store which will join Primark as anchor tenants when the new stores opens in 2027.
Located in Cergy, Val d’Oise, the Les 3 Fontaines destination comprises 1 million sq ft of prime retail space, including 350,000 sq ft added in 2022.
Between then and 2024, annual footfall has risen 15%, reaching 13 million annual visits. Growth continues, with year-on-year visitor numbers up a further 3.4% so far in 2025, Hammerson said.
Other recently-signed retail brands include Aroma-Zone, a leading natural beauty brand in France, while Inter-Actif, an official Apple Premium Partner, will also open next month.
Since the beginning of the year, 20 long-term leases have also been completed with €36 million (£31.60 million) in contracted rents.
The destination features 200 occupiers, including Sephora, Adidas, Mango, Footlocker, and Zara.
Grégoire Peureux, chief operating officer at Hammerson, commented: “Achieving 100% pre-letting for this latest repositioning epitomises our asset and leasing strategy. Our success is driven by creating attractive spaces that generate demand, broaden the appeal of our destinations, and grow rental income and value. With further openings and more leasing to come, our momentum continues.”