Home Quarters Warehouse

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Home Quarters Warehouse
Image:HQ05.jpg
Type Private —
home improvement retail
Founded 1984 (disestablished 1999)
Headquarters Virginia Beach, Virginia
Industry Retail
Products Lumber, tools, hardware, garden supplies & plants

Home Quarters Warehouse (HQ) was a chain of "big-box" home improvement stores, originally headquartered in Virginia Beach, Virginia.

In 1984, the chemical manufacturing company W.R. Grace & Co. announced its intentions to enter the home improvement retail business, hiring Bernard R. Kossar and Frank Dozci to head the new chain. The first Home Quarters stores opened in February 1985 in Virginia Beach and Hampton, Virginia. Grace spun off HQ in 1986, but the new company was to be hit by hard times from the October 1987 stock market crash. In December 1987, Hechinger agreed to buy HQ for $66 million. The merger was completed in February 1988, with Frank Doczi left in charge of the Home Quarters division (Kossar moves on to found OW Office Warehouse, an office supply store that used a logo and branding similar to that of HQ.) Under Hechinger, HQ hit the prime of its life and expanded to much of the United States as a viable competitor to Home Depot and Lowe's.

However, by 1995 its parent company Hechinger had been hit with financial trouble and began to scale back its operations, including moving HQ's headquarters from Virginia Beach to Hechinger's main office in Landover, Maryland. The Hechinger family sold the company to Los Angeles investors Leonard Green & Partners for $507 million in July 1997, and the management launched new, smaller concept stores called Better Spaces and Wye River Hardware & Home searching for a niche. In September, Hechinger/HQ was merged with San Antonio, Texas-based Builders Square, formerly owned by Kmart.

After several rounds of store closings, Hechinger Co. and Home Quarters Warehouse filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on June 11, 1999, but the reorganization failed. That September, Hechinger's assets were liquidated, including its 117 remaining stores.


[edit] Slogans

"HQ To The Rescue!" (early 1990's)


[edit] References