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RH
Type Public
Traded as NYSE: RH
S&P 400 component
Industry Retail
Website rh.com
1History
2Source books
3Design philosophy
4Executives
5References
6External links
History[edit]
Stephen Gordon, founder of Restoration Hardware at the original Eureka, CA headquarters in 1981.
Stephen Gordon founded Restoration Hardware in Eureka, California, in 1979 while restoring a
Victorian home and finding affordable, high-quality hardware and fixtures unavailable. Mr. Gordon
honed his merchandising skills for ten years expanding slowly in Northern California and Boston
before raising outside capital from Cardinal Investments allowing accelerated expansion. [5] The
company had 47 stores when it went public in 1998, ending the year at over 65 stores and
commencing a rapid expansion to over 100 stores in 31 states reaching $369.5 million in net
sales[6] by 2001.
Gary Friedman joined the company from Williams-Sonoma, Inc., in 2001 as Chief Executive
Officer after being passed over for the CEO position at Williams-Sonoma by Howard Lester when
Restoration Hardware's sales were waning and the company was seeking additional capital. In
2005, Gordon left the company in order to take over as CEO of Robert Redford's Sundance
Catalog Company.[7] In 2007, Sears Holdings Corporation announced the purchase of a 13.7%
share of Restoration Hardware, prompting speculation that Sears Holdings might attempt a full
takeover.[8] After the bursting of the United States housing bubble, the company was slated to
close two stores in 2008, including the original store located in the heart of Old Town Eureka,
[9]
and open one in Canada. In June 2008, the company completed the transaction
without Sears Holding, but instead with Catterton Partners.
As of June 18, 2008, the company was no longer publicly traded. [10] That year, the company also
launched its baby & child line.[11] In 2012, Restoration Hardware underwent an initial public
offering trading at $24 a share at its opening.[12] RH's common stock now trades on the New York
Stock Exchange under the symbol RH.[13] Upon this move the company renamed itself RH,
removing the rest of the company name's letters from its official nomenclature. [14] About 65% of
the company's products come from overseas, particularly from contract manufacturers in
southern China.[15] The company is also the largest importer of Belgian Linen and Italian bedding
in the United States.[16]
RH created a small spaces line in 2012, composed of furnishings scaled down for smaller living
spaces. The 2014 Small Spaces source book depicts 18 different smaller-scale homes in the
United States and Europe.[17][18] In 2013, RH also released the Objects of Curiosity source book,
showing character pieces, artifacts, and unique décor. [19] The tableware line was released in 2013.
[19]
In 2012, the company also encountered some accusations of copying the designs of other
companies, specifically those used for the US military. [20] On March 7, 2013, Restoration
Hardware opened a gallery in Boston's Back Bay in an 1864 brick and brownstone structure
at 234 Berkeley Street.[21][22] In May 2013, the company announced a multichannel RH
contemporary art platform when it acquired the first edition of Rain Room by Random
International with exclusive showing rights in North America. RH loaned Rain Room to the
Museum of Modern Art in New York for the U.S. premier of EXPO 1: New York from mid-May
through July 2013.[23][24] In 2014, RH opened a 70,000 square foot store which Atlanta Magazine
called RH's "next-generation full-line design gallery", which includes amenities like a 50-foot
infinite pool.[25]
RH operates six stores in Canada: one full line design gallery at Yorkdale Shopping Centre in
Toronto, three galleries and two outlets.