

This article looks at VegNonVeg’s new 4,200 sq ft flagship in Jubilee Hills, Hyderabad, highlighting the brand’s evolution from sneaker boutique to cultural curator. It outlines VNV’s culture-to-commerce philosophy; its collaboration with AIM Architecture to blend Charminar-inspired design with contemporary streetwear aesthetics; and the flagship’s role as a multi-use hub for music, art, café culture, and community events.
Since its founding in 2016, VegNonVeg (VNV) has positioned itself as India’s first multi-brand sneaker and streetwear boutique — a label whose name itself reflects a collision of contrasts and an ethos built around the convergence of different tastes and points of view. Based out of Delhi and helmed by founders including Anand Ahuja and Abhineet Singh, VNV has evolved from a retail space into a cultural force, leveraging its community-first posture to engage with music, art, fashion and subculture in India.
VegNonVeg distinct is characterized its commitment to what it calls 'culture-to-commerce' — an approach that endeavours to be at the forefront of movements rooted in music, art, fashion and more, which emphasizes not only selling products but also fostering a deeper understanding of why certain items are significant within the cultural landscape. Its inventory remains curatorial (covering everything from classic silhouettes to limited-edition drops) while its platform extends into storytelling, creative collaborations and community events.
At the end of October, VegNonVeg opened its largest and most conceptually ambitious space to date in Jubilee Hills, Hyderabad — a 4,200-square-foot flagship that transcends the traditional boutique and instead functions as a 'living hub' where sneakers, sound and self-expression converge. The architecture, realised in collaboration with Hong Kong–based AIM Architecture, intentionally melds Hyderabad’s heritage motifs with the brand’s street-wear aesthetic.
From the moment one enters, they find the the arches and jaali-style layering evoked by the city’s iconic Charminar, reinterpreted through terracotta-brick walls; hand-painted plaster surfaces; industrial steel and raw concrete surfaces that anchor the space in modernism. A sculpted terracotta stage underscores the flagship’s intention as a space for performance and gathering, not mere retail. The café-terrace invites the shoppers to linger, and dedicated zones for art, music and community hangouts expand the boutique into something closer to a cultural clubhouse.
In this flagship, VegNonVeg anchors itself into Hyderabad’s local fabric while projecting its own creative culture outward. It’s built as a platform — for music, photography, food, coffee, events and self-expression where sneakers live side by side with subculture. Through design, materiality, and programming, the Jubilee Hills flagship signals a new chapter for VegNonVeg. It extends the brand’s trajectory from retailer to cultural curator, offering a model of how retail can become community infrastructure.
Follow VegNonVeg here.
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