Information
Architecture.
v1.0 — sitemap, navigation, page-level IA, content taxonomy, URL structure, user journeys, and mobile considerations. The buildable blueprint.
v1.0 — sitemap, navigation, page-level IA, content taxonomy, URL structure, user journeys, and mobile considerations. The buildable blueprint.
The homepage opens like a magazine cover, not a CMS index. Nav is necessary but never the hero. The reader's first impression is editorial, not menu-driven.
Every entry point — Dreamer, Decider, Advisor, Brand — reads as part of one publication. Trade content lives below the fold and in the footer; consumer is hero. The voice never code-switches.
Paid content is always marked. The advisor area is visible but not invasive. The reader can always tell the difference between a story and a placement — even at a glance.
We don't show everything. We show the right thing. Algorithmic feeds are out. Editorial selection is in. Less, but better — every time.
Luxury readers use desktop and mobile in roughly equal measure. The site looks beautiful on both. We don't apologise for desktop richness; we adapt to mobile thoughtfully.
The Atlas helps readers find what they didn't know they were looking for. But the homepage stays editor-curated and the voice stays human. AI is wayfinding across the corpus — never a replacement for editorial judgment.
Lilac border = primary navigation. Ocean border = Phase 2. Dashed top-border block = footer trade layer (always present, never in primary nav). The Atlas is not in the sitemap because it isn't a destination — it's a cross-cutting AI layer that lives in the sticky nav (always available), as a homepage module, and as contextual prompts on every story and pillar page.
Six page templates that account for ~95% of every reader interaction.
Total page sections: 9. Estimated time-to-meaningful-content: under 2 seconds on broadband desktop.
A reader who lands on a story page should feel like they've opened a magazine. No rails. No widgets. No popup. The story is the experience.
Each pillar's hub leads with the most-recent moment, not the back catalogue. The reader meets *what's now* before they explore *what was*.
Every story carries two classifications:
Vertical (the editorial section): Hotels & Stays · Destinations · The Journey · Wellbeing · The People · The Edit.
Theme (the quarter's editorial drumbeat): Innovation · Wellbeing Anew · Cruise Confused · 2027 Trends — and the themes that follow.
Plus tags — destination, brand, advisor, format — for cross-linking. Tags don't appear in nav. They power related-content surfaces and search.
No query strings in primary URLs. No CMS-default slugs. Stories are SEO-readable and human-shareable.
One journey per audience. Each shows entry, key actions, outcome.
~50% of luxury readers will arrive on mobile. The brand cannot feel like a downgrade on the smaller frame. Mobile gets the same care as desktop — different layout, same standard.
Luxury Unpacked · Information Architecture · v1.0 · May 2026
Next deliverable — homepage concept design (rendered HTML mockup).