![](http://library.vu.edu.pk/cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/000100A/https/blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiMwUN6W3zXsh2ArzeyvUoZs6MTIIgWfDRE4hjTJPhAcCSH8ZA7j3snzm5vBG8hS16IOFLyWxhjuFYwgy3Idgd8zGunaFTC-rCzhW92f8LCl-d3blothMsE-BOLmcFopITa1miRcfWavfUV/s1600/tag_heuer_logo.gif)
The chic, modern 800-square-foot space’s main offering is of course timepieces, including boutique-exclusive and limited-edition product not available anywhere else in the U.S. It also houses TAG Heuer fashion items ranging from beautifully crafted, vintage stainless steel cufflinks to the brand's technologically advanced eyewear and fine leathergoods. The boutique was designed by renowned architect Eric Carlson.
Below is the interior of the shop.
TAG Heuer recently celebrated its 150th anniversary. Its origins go back to a Swiss shoemaker's son named Edouard Heuer who made the decision to "turn his life over to the conquest and calibration of the passing hours, minutes, seconds and fractions of seconds; marking their passage with the tiny incremental movements of the blued steel hand of a chronograph against the crisp white enamel dial of the pocket watch." In 1882 Heuer introduced his first chronograph, setting a benchmark for extreme accuracy.