Home / Business / Canal Street has become New York’s unlikely menswear hotspot — with savvy brands purposely banding together

Canal Street has become New York’s unlikely menswear hotspot — with savvy brands purposely banding together

It’s not just a destination for tourists looking to buy knockoff handbags.

The stretch of Canal Street west of Broadway has long been known as a venue for hawkers, but, in recent years, it’s blossomed into a nexus of independent high-end men’s clothing stores.

William Cooper is an artist and interior designer best known for designing Vanity Fair’s Oscar Party spaces. He opened his first brick-and-mortar store on Canal Street in Fall 2025. Dubbed the William White Emporium, it’s a hybrid café-boutique-showroom. Tamara Beckwith
NYNext spoke to five independent, boutique, menswear shops on Canal Street for this story. They are The Brooklyn Circus at 361 Canal, Merz b. Schwanen at 359 Canal, Knickerbocker at 357 Canal, Drake’s at 327 Canal and William White Emporium at 325 Canal. NY Post Design

“I love the juxtaposition,” William Cooper, founder of William White, a luxury lifestyle brand that opened an “emporium” on Canal this past fall, told NYNext. “It’s so New York.”

In the hybrid café-showroom, shoppers — typically designers, finance and tech types — can grab an espresso made from Yemeni beans, try on $700 corduroy pants or test out a $50,000 corduroy couch.

Knickerbocker, which sits at the corner of Canal and Wooster, was the first menswear brand to bet on the street and largely set the tone for all that has followed. Tamara Beckwith

The Canal Street boutique boom began in the fall of 2020 when Knickerbocker — a brand offering elevated menswear, originally manufactured on the border of Brooklyn and Queens — signed a lease for a flagship store at Wooster and Canal.

At the time, the block was dominated by shuttered storefronts and souvenir stands selling ‘I love New York’ t-shirts. There was no precedent for anything designer.

“They took a risk, they were alone,” said Jack Albert Laboz, a principal with United American Land, which owns 15 buildings on Canal, including the ones Knickerbocker and the William White Emporium occupy. “But, [Knickerbocker’s owners] saw the vision.”

Chris Aliaga is the general manager of Knickerbocker. When the brand arrived on Canal Street during the pandemic in Fall 2020, the only other tenant on the block was a Matchaful. Tamara Beckwith
Inside Knickerbocker, a customer peruses shirts and pants. With the city announcing plans to widen sidewalks and make other pedestrian improvements, there’s optimism for even more foot traffic in coming years. Tamara Beckwith

In 2021, Drake’s, a Savile Row haberdasher, moved to Canal from Prince Street in Soho. The British brand, which was first established in the 1970s and initially focused only on ties and accessories, has risen in recent years as part of the preppy resurgence in fashion.

“[Ownership] has a romantic feeling about Canal Street — the counterfeit guys across the street, the old artist lofts of 30 years ago,” Drake’s made-to-order lead Jack Nagla told NYNext of the motivation behind the move.

Jack Nagla is Drake’s US made-to-order lead. Inside the brand’s Canal Street store, customers can commission custom jackets and trousers from thousands of suiting fabrics. Tamara Beckwith

The menswear brand The Brooklyn Circus was drawn to the area after noting the other boutiques moving in. It brought its apparel — which plays with both urban and preppy elements in a style known as “Black Ivy” — to Canal in the Spring of 2023.

“We saw these menswear brands showing up and wanted to be involved,” said Malik Tate, Director of Operations for the label, which has done collabs with the Gap, Puma, Lee and others.

As The Brooklyn Circus’ Director of Operations, Malik Tate has helped position the brand as both a designer destination and a connective hub within the block’s growing retail ecosystem. Tamara Beckwith
Laboz’s firm, United American Land, owns 15 buildings on Canal Street, including the one that houses The Brooklyn Circus. Laboz told NYNext that the firm intends to redevelop two of three buildings at the corners of Canal and Broadway, indicating that what began west of Broadway is beginning to push east. Tamara Beckwith

Canal’s cohesion was also part of the pull for Merz b. Schwanen, a heritage German brand best known for its heavy-weight, vintage-style t-shirts. They’ve been in the spotlight since 2022, when Jeremy Allen White’s character in “The Bear,” Carmy, began flexing his chef muscles in one of their classic white tees.

In the Spring of 2024, Laboz showed Merz’s married co-owners, Peter and Gitta Plotnicki, a vacancy sandwiched between Knickerbocker and The Brooklyn Circus.

Peter and Gitta Plotnicki are the married owners of Merz b. Schwanen. Decades before they opened their North American flagship on Canal, they came to New York to photograph storefronts on the street. Gitta, a fashion student in Berlin at the time, used them for her senior thesis project. Tamara Beckwith
A relaunched Merz b. debuted its first collection in 2011, did alright for a decade, and then was thrust into the zeitgeist in 2022 when Courtney Wheeler, costume designer on FX’s hit show “The Bear,” off-handedly mentioned where Carmy, played by Jeremy Allen White, sourced his dashing white t-shirts from. HULU

It was nearly two years after “The Bear” debuted, and the couple was looking to capitalize on growing buzz stateside. They signed the lease for their North American flagship that very day.

“Having these neighbors made our decision easy,” Peter told NYNext.

It was a dream come true: Three decades earlier, Gitta, then a fashion student in Berlin, had brought Peter to Canal to take pictures of storefronts for her senior thesis project.

“That vibrant energy,” Gitta remembered. “We were obsessed.” 

At the William White Emporium, in addition to the designer clothes, Cooper sells cups of coffee made from Yemeni beans, wicker baskets from Sicily and glassware from Egypt. He’s also got copies of just about every magazine and paper in print, including, of course, The Post. Tamara Beckwith

There’s a sense of community amongst the boutiques. The Brooklyn Circus hosts an annual Juneteenth block party and also leads a running club that includes employees from nearly every other clothing store on Canal.

Beyond menswear, other upscale retailers are moving in as well. Happier Grocer, a sort of mini-Erewhon that sells $17 smoothies, opened on Canal between Wooster and West Broadway in 2024. Wellness club Remedy Place, which offers guided ice baths and red light therapy, followed in 2025.

Remedy Place, which opened on Canal Street in 2025, is a wellness-first social club with ice baths, cold plunges, lymphatic drainage rooms and water bottle service. EMMY PARK

Infrastructure is part of the area’s appeal. Multiple subway lines stop nearby, the SoHo-Cast Iron Historic District preserves architectural uniformity, and last fall, the city announced plans for expanded sidewalks and pedestrian improvements along Canal.

In spite of the continuous changes, the street’s newer tenants are trying to preserve the delicate balance with their older neighbors.

People purchase items from street vendors along Canal Street in Winter 2025. Michael Nigro for NY Post
Canal Rubber, one of Canal Street’s longstanding industrial supply stores, is a reminder of the businesses that shaped the corridor long before its recent retail transformation. Tamara Beckwith

Merz sourced fixtures from a lighting store that has been on the block for 49 years. Others bought flooring and sound systems from similar holdovers. 

And yet, momentum is hard to ignore. What began west of Broadway is now pressing east.

The menswear wave on Canal Street has been concentrated between Wooster and West Broadway thus far, but it’s beginning to push east. Tamara Beckwith

This story is part of NYNext, an indispensable insider insight into the innovations, moonshots and political chess moves that matter most to NYC’s power players (and those who aspire to be).


United American Land owns three of the four corners at Broadway and Canal. Laboz confirmed plans to redevelop two, including one for retail.

“But I don’t think Canal will ever completely gentrify the way the Upper East Side has,” Cooper said. “New Yorkers always find the cracks and crevices.”

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