Design Research (store)

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Design Research
Defunct1978 (1978)
FateBankruptcy; Brand rights acquired jointly by Crate & Barrel and Pottery Barn

Design Research (abbreviated and trademarked as D/R) was a retail store founded in 1953 by

Ben Thompson in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and which introduced the concept of lifestyle store. In the 1970s under subsequent ownership, it became a chain of a dozen stores across the United States, and went bankrupt in 1979. Thompson's goal was to provide "a place where people could buy everything they needed for contemporary living",[1] notably modern European furnishings and in particular Scandinavian design
.

D/R has continued to have an outsized reputation: in 2000, a survey of influential design stores named D/R as number one, though it had then been closed for 22 years.

Conran's.[4]

Selection of products

Design Research carried an eclectic selection of products, from

Joe Colombo.[6]

Design Research was the exclusive US representative for the Finnish clothing and textiles of

Jacqueline Kennedy was pictured on the cover of Sports Illustrated in 1960 in a Marimekko sundress purchased at D/R.[8]

Stores

The original Design Research store was in a 19th-century wood frame

Lexington Avenue (1961) and East 57th Street (1964) in New York City; and Ghirardelli Square in San Francisco (1965).[citation needed
]

In 1969, Thompson moved the original Cambridge store to a revolutionary new 24,000-square-foot (2,200 m2) building designed by his firm, Benjamin Thompson and Associates, at 48 Brattle Street in Harvard Square, on a block that came to be known as "Architects' Corner".[10] The 5-story building consists of flat concrete slabs supported by interior columns, and enclosed by frameless tempered glass walls.[11] The use of butted glass with no frame or mullions was unprecedented, and "allowed D/R to be a building almost 'without architecture'".[12]

It immediately received favorable reviews: "points the way to a method of glass building that could create a warmer city, adding color and light and optimism to the life of the streets".[13] The building won many awards over the years:[14]

The first D/R stores were all located in urban areas, but under new management starting in 1969, D/R opened stores in suburban

The Mall at Chestnut Hill in Newton, Massachusetts (1974). The company also opened urban stores at the Embarcadero Center in San Francisco (1973), and in downtown Philadelphia in Rittenhouse Square (1975).[16]

Later tenants of Brattle Street store

After D/R closed in 1979, the Brattle Street building housed a Crate & Barrel store (1979-January 2009[17]).

From October 2009 to April 2010, the vacant Brattle Street store hosted a temporary installation of D/R goods, visible from the street.[18]

Since August 2010, the building has housed an Anthropologie store.[19]

Corporate history

Design Research was started by the architect

Ben Thompson in 1953.[citation needed] Spencer Field, a furniture designer, joined the firm as a 50-50 business partner in the early 1950s.[20] By 1966, it was clear that the company was underfinanced for Thompson's expansion plans, and he started looking for outside investors. The company was reorganized as a new corporate entity in 1967 and was recapitalized, with Field's interest being bought out in February 1968 by Peter J. Sprague, an entrepreneur and chairman of National Semiconductor, who became chairman.[citation needed
]

In 1969, Sprague forced Thompson out as director of the company, but Thompson remained a stockholder.[citation needed] Under a succession of presidents, D/R opened more new stores, but Thompson felt that they had lost their distinctive style and approach.[citation needed] By 1976, the business was deteriorating, and in 1979 it declared bankruptcy. Rights to the names "Design Research" and "D/R" were bought jointly by Crate & Barrel and Pottery Barn.[21]

Bibliography

Notes

  1. ^ a b Pilar Viladas, "One-Stop Living", The New York Times September 29, 2010 [1]
  2. ^
  3. ^ a b Joseph P. Kahn (November 1, 1985). "On Display: Founder Gordon Segal's sense of selling as theater has made Crate & Barrel one of the world's most admired and imitated retailing operations". Inc. Retrieved February 5, 2010.
  4. ^ a b Suzanne Slesin, "Design/ Research Store Starts Its Final Sale", The New York Times June 1, 1979
  5. ^ Carole Nicksin, "The Legacy of Design Research: The impact of the long-defunct retailer is still being felt within the home furnishings industry", HFN The Weekly Newspaper for the Home Furnishing Network, November 8, 2004 full text
  6. ^ Rachel Travers, "Through a glass, brightly", The Boston Globe, October 29, 2009. [2]
  7. , p. 162
  8. ^ Robert Campbell, "Two urban drawing cards are now in limbo: Challenges ahead for Faneuil Hall Marketplace and a glass icon in Cambridge", The Boston Globe, December 21, 2008 full text
  9. Archipedia [3]
  10. ^ "25-Year Award to Design Research Headquarters", ArchitectureWeek full text
  11. , p. 188
  12. ^ Architectural Record as quoted in Gavin W. Kleespies and Katie MacDonald (Cambridge Historical Society), "Design Research Building" in Harvard Square Business Association Archives [4] Archived 2010-12-23 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ "BTA's Honors and Awards". Archived from the original on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2010-10-24.
  14. ^ Twenty Five Year Award Recipients Archived 2016-11-19 at the Wayback Machine.
  15. Parsons The New School for Design, 2004. Chapter 2
    , p. 63
  16. ^ Peter F. Zhu, "Crate & Barrel To Close", The Harvard Crimson, November 19, 2008 full text
  17. ^ Alyssa Giacobbe, "A Look Back at Design Research", The New York Times October 28, 2009 full text
  18. ^ Xi Yu, "Women's Clothing Store Anthropologie To Light Up Space on Brattle St.", The Harvard Crimson, June 24, 2010 full text
  19. ^ Obituary, "Spencer Field, at 78; owned travel firm, designed furniture", The Boston Globe, February 21, 1997, p. B7
  20. ^ Levy, "Design Research" Chapter 1 Archived 2013-05-15 at the Wayback Machine, p. 17-29

Further reading

External links