Room to bear
Christine Carrillo
Opening its doors for the first time in California, Room & Board,
which serves more than 7,000 customers throughout the state, aims to
broaden its reach with its new location at South Coast Plaza Village.
After the store’s grand opening on Saturday, Orange County
residents and current Room & Board customers will no longer have to
rely on the accuracy of photographs of home furnishingsin the catalog
or on the Web site. Instead, they will be able to peruse the
47,000-square-foot home store to get a feel for the products and
displays.
Adhering to the notion that home store purchases tend to be
significant decisions for their customers to make, John Gabbert, the
store’s founder, said that by displaying furniture and furnishings in
a room-like setting and employing knowledgeable staff, the store will
ease customers’ minds when they debate whether to make a purchase.
“Our people are there to help you do the room,” he said. “[The
displays] are just to help them get an idea of what goes together.”
By focusing on thoroughly planned displays of their furniture,
furnishings and accessories, all of which are available for purchase,
customers can also get a feel for how the items would actually look
in their homes.
“I’ve been in their store and I live with enough of their products
... [making catalog purchases] wasn’t a problem for me,” said Jocelyn
Bratter, a Newport Coast resident who has been shopping Room & Board
since 1993. “It was a lifestyle. It was enticing and I wanted my home
to look like that.”
Since the late 1980s, shortly after the company was founded, Room
& Board pulled away from the industry norm of trend-driven furniture
design and began to establish relationships with small, family-owned
furniture manufacturers. Gabbert, whose family was in the traditional
furniture business, felt that by working with smaller manufacturers,
he could improve the quality and styles of the furniture.
“We know we get quality and we have a quality point of view,”
Gabbert said. “We believe that a good classic design will last a long
period of time.”
In 1998 he found another way to give his customers the furniture
and furnishings they were looking for. He founded Retrospect, which
will open jointly with Room & Board. While Room & Board will provide
customers with 20th- and 21st-century styles, Retrospect will offer
items characteristic of the 18th and 19th centuries, to cater to
various tastes
Gabbert believes that the presence of the other home stores nearby
will benefit his business.
“We like the idea that we’re near other home stores,” he said. “We
think it’s a hard decision for people to make, especially buying
furniture. It’s a big decision to make .... This way people can look
around.”
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