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Best Products showrooms by SITE Anyone remember these? Rate Topic: -----

#1 User is offline   StevenRocks 

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Posted 31 May 2005 - 03:19 PM

The Best Products showrooms by SITE were Post-Modern icons, giving the suburbs their own landmark architecture. Does anone remember these store designs?

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Houston

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Richmond, VA

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Scaramento

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Towson, MD

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Hialeah, FL

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Richmond, VA

Check out the article Best Thing Going
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#2 User is offline   colin 

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Posted 01 June 2005 - 01:26 PM

That's some really great architecture. It definitely gave it a unique look.
I think I remember the one in Houston (not remember the actual store, just the abandoned building), just south of Almeda Mall behind the Popeye's. I saw the crumbled building and just thought that it was deteriorating.

When did these go out of business?
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#3 User is offline   AvianKeahi 

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Posted 01 June 2005 - 02:57 PM

colin, on Jun 1 2005, 02:26 PM, said:

That's some really great architecture. It definitely gave it a unique look.
I think I remember the one in Houston (not remember the actual store, just the abandoned building), just south of Almeda Mall behind the Popeye's. I saw the crumbled building and just thought that it was deteriorating.

When did these go out of business?



This is what happened in Houston:

http://www.texaschap...facadeintro.htm

Scroll down to the bottom to see the building today. :(
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#4 User is offline   StevenRocks 

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Posted 01 June 2005 - 02:57 PM

colin, on Jun 1 2005, 02:26 PM, said:

When did these go out of business?

I think the whole chain went out of business around 1997.
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#5 User is offline   colin 

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Posted 01 June 2005 - 04:08 PM

AvianKeahi, on Jun 1 2005, 01:57 PM, said:

This is what happened in Houston:

http://www.texaschap...facadeintro.htm

Scroll down to the bottom to see the building today.  :(

Thanks for that link.
I lived right around there in 99/00 and it looked slightly different than that, but not by much. The parking lot was also in worse condition then.
It was in a terrible location (on a side street two blocks from an outdated mall) and was in a pretty bad neighborhood, so I'm not surprised that it never sold.
It's a shame though that someone didn't pick up on that idea and turn it into like a laser tag place or some other sort of themed attraction.
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#6 User is offline   StevenRocks 

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Posted 01 June 2005 - 04:45 PM

I only know of a handful of Best Products stores that are occupied today. The way its stores were constructed worked for that kind of retailer, but not so well for modern stores.
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#7 User is offline   jazzman 

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Posted 23 June 2005 - 03:38 AM

I lived near the one in Houston in the 80's. I mentioned once to a friend that I was going to Best and invited him to join me. He said they were tearing it down. He didn't understand that the deconstruction was the architecture. I wonder how many potential customers they lost due to misunderstanding.
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:lol:
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#8 User is offline   StevenRocks 

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Posted 23 June 2005 - 10:31 AM

^ The designs were a little out there. I can kind of see where your friend was coming from.

They were very cool though. A lot more distinctive than today's 'cookie-cutter' retail model.
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#9 User is offline   avalone 

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Posted 13 February 2006 - 04:01 AM

gods i can remember those stores expecially the pealing wall in south richmond, the one that looked like an outdoor garden, in western henrico county near regency square, and i think the one near valley view mall in roanoke near the airport
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#10 User is offline   StevenRocks 

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Posted 13 February 2006 - 04:06 AM

The Roanoke one was a conventional Best Products showroom though, not nearly as interesting as many of the others.
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#11 User is offline   hood 

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Posted 13 February 2006 - 02:51 PM

What kind of store was Best Products showroom?
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#12 User is offline   StevenRocks 

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Posted 13 February 2006 - 07:13 PM

It was a catalog showroom. Typically, they only showed one example of each item they sold on the floor. If you wanted an item, you filled out a order ticket and brought it to a desk (or called it in). They then retrieved your item from the back warehouse while you waited at this contraption that looked like the baggage carousel at the airport. When you got the item from the carousel, you then paid for it at the checkouts.

This post has been edited by StevenRocks: 13 February 2006 - 07:13 PM

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#13 User is offline   DigitalSky 

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Posted 14 February 2006 - 07:21 AM

I remember there used to be a Best store next to Target in Matthews (which eventually became the spot where Rhodes Furniture was)..
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#14 User is offline   UrbaniDesDev 

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Posted 14 February 2006 - 09:45 PM

James Wines was the head of my department in school. He was the head of SITE
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#15 User is offline   Miesian Corners 

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Posted 16 February 2006 - 09:38 AM

Great pics Steven. I had forgotten how cool all the Best stores were.
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#16 User is offline   StevenRocks 

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Posted 16 February 2006 - 10:18 PM

I found them on a magazien website. I wish I had a camera back when those stores were in full bloom.
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#17 User is offline   debbied 

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Posted 19 January 2008 - 04:39 PM

View PostStevenRocks, on Jun 1 2005, 03:57 PM, said:

I think the whole chain went out of business around 1997.


trying to find out who took over best jewelry warranties
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#18 User is offline   pdxstreetcar 

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Posted 01 February 2008 - 12:30 PM

vintage 1970s film on SITE Best Showrooms

http://www.youtube.c...h?v=sxPuM4w3c2g (part I of IV)
http://www.youtube.c...h?v=FCImIgZWVdw (part II of IV)
http://www.youtube.c...h?v=_m5jDFJDl0Y (part III of IV)
http://www.youtube.c...h?v=6-gLZvFp8sg (part IV of IV)
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#19 User is offline   richthofen 

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Posted 10 November 2008 - 03:59 PM

Wow...I certainly remember Best Products, my Dad was an assistant manager and customer service manager for them for about 10 years in the 80's and 90's. But the two stores he worked in (Greensboro and Winston-Salem, NC) were of very conventional/uninteresting architecture; I didn't even know about these early stores that were such unique designs.

Does anyone remember their trucks from the 80's? The trailers had the Best logo, of course, but they were painted in interesting fashions...I remember one had giant paperclips painted on the side, I think another pens, another some sort of abstract painting...they were unique too.
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