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The Stash Edge · Intelligence Desk MACALLAN 1926

Nuna Opens 8,000-Square-Foot Flagship That Doubles as In-House Content Studio

Baby gear brand turns New Jersey showroom into production infrastructure, filming demos and tutorials where parents already test strollers.

Published July 1, 2026 Source Modern Retail From the chopped neck
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Nuna
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MACALLAN 1926 · July 1, 2026

Nuna Opens 8,000-Square-Foot Flagship That Doubles as In-House Content Studio

Baby gear brand turns New Jersey showroom into production infrastructure, filming demos and tutorials where parents already test strollers.

Nuna opened an 8,000-square-foot flagship showroom in Avenel, New Jersey, that functions simultaneously as a product showroom and a content production facility, according to Modern Retail. The baby gear brand—known for premium car seats and strollers favored by millennial parents—built the space to serve walk-in customers testing products while capturing video content of those same interactions for digital distribution.

The dual-use design lets Nuna film product demonstrations, installation tutorials, and parent testimonials in the same environment where customers handle the gear. Staff demonstrate car seat installation or stroller folding for visiting parents, and those sessions become scripted content assets. The showroom includes dedicated filming zones with controlled lighting and backdrops, but the majority of content captures real customer interactions in the main floor space. Nuna's team edits footage on-site and publishes it across owned channels and paid media within days of capture.

This works because premium baby gear sits in a research-heavy purchase category where parents demand proof before spending $400 to $800 per item. Car seat safety ratings and stroller maneuverability are abstract until a parent sees the five-point harness click or watches the one-hand fold in real time. Video collapses that gap. When the demo happens in a physical space that customers can also visit, the content carries implied third-party validation—this is not a soundstage, this is where other parents came to decide. The showroom becomes both the set and the social proof.

The model also solves a production cost problem. Hiring a crew, renting a studio, and coordinating talent for a single product video can cost $3,000 to $8,000 per shoot. Nuna amortizes that cost by producing content continuously in a space it already staffs for retail. A product specialist who would otherwise spend the day answering questions now answers them on camera. The incremental cost per video drops to near zero after the initial infrastructure spend.

A small physical-product brand runs this play by identifying one repeatable customer interaction that proves the product, then building a simple standing set to capture it. If you sell modular shelving, the interaction is assembly speed. If you sell chef knives, it is slicing a tomato without pressure. Rent a small storefront or sublease a corner of a coworking space for $800 to $1,500 per month. Equip it with two softbox lights ($150), a mirrorless camera ($600 used), and a lapel mic ($80). Open the space two or three days per week for appointments or walk-ins. Film every interaction. Edit in-house using DaVinci Resolve (free) or CapCut (free). Publish three videos per week: one long-form demo (YouTube), one testimonial cut (Instagram), one installation or unboxing short (TikTok). The standing set means you can shoot spontaneously when a customer asks a good question or when a product arrives.

The broader mechanism is turning a fixed cost—rent, staffing—into a content asset that pays for itself through improved conversion. Brands that treat their physical space as media infrastructure rather than pure retail footage multiply the return on that square footage without doubling overhead.

The takeaway
Turn any customer-facing space into a standing content set by filming the interactions that already happen there.
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