Brookstone — The Gadget Toy Store That Couldn’t Survive the Mall It Lived In
Summary
Brookstone was the mall chain that sold the things you didn't know you needed — the massage chair you tried for twenty minutes, the levitating speaker, the nose-hair trimmer, the gadget you handled in a bright store and then, increasingly, bought somewhere cheaper. Founded in 1965 in the Berkshires as a mail-order catalog of hard-to-find specialty tools, it became a fixture of American malls and airports for half a century. On August 2, 2018, it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy for the second time in four years and announced it would close all 101 of its remaining U.S. mall stores. The mall chain was dead; the brand was not. Roughly 35 airport stores, the website, and the wholesale business survived under new owners, which is why the verdict here is not liquidation but online-only.
The chain's whole proposition was tactile, and that was both its charm and its fatal exposure. Brookstone stores were a hands-on demo floor: you sank into the recliner, you flew the toy drone, you squeezed the travel pillow. That experience cost money to staff and to lease in a high-traffic mall — and it was, by design, perfectly reproducible by a customer who tried the product at Brookstone and then ordered the same item, or a near-identical one, from Amazon for less. Brookstone had built a showroom for a catalog it no longer controlled.
Brookstone did not fail because anyone hated it. It failed because the mall traffic that justified its expensive lease footprint collapsed, and because the gadgets it specialized in — the speakers, the headphones, the chargers, the novelty tech — became exactly the category that e-commerce commoditized first. By 2018 the company carried liabilities reported as high as $500 million against assets of $50 million to $100 million, and the "extremely challenging retail environment at malls," in management's own phrase, left no version of the store worth saving. The airport business, which sold to a captive audience of bored, time-rich travelers, was the only physical format that still worked.
The afterlife is the licensed-label kind. A New York brand-management firm, Bluestar Alliance, and a California electronics manufacturer, Apex Digital, bought the name, the airport stores, the e-commerce operation, and a stake in the roughly 550 Brookstone-branded stores in China. The recliners are gone from the mall; the logo lives on a website and on a wall of products in Terminal B.
Timeline
The Catalog That Became a Petting Zoo
Brookstone began as the most rational thing imaginable: a mail-order catalog of specialty tools for hobbyists who couldn't find a particular dental clamp or precision gauge at the local hardware store. Pierre and Mary de Beaumont built it for $500 out of a farmhouse, learned accounting by correspondence, and named the company after their farm. It was a needs business — you ordered the obscure tool because you genuinely needed it.
What turned Brookstone into a beloved retailer, and eventually into a cautionary one, was the decision to put the catalog in a mall and let people touch everything. By the 1980s and 1990s, a Brookstone store was less a shop than a demonstration floor: the massage chair you sat in until a clerk gently reclaimed it, the foot spa, the wine aerator, the gadget alarm clock, the personal-care device of mildly comic specificity. The genius was experiential. You could not appreciate a $400 massage chair from a photograph; you had to sit in it. Brookstone sold the trial, and the trial sold the product.
That model carried a hidden assumption that held for decades and then quietly stopped holding: that the only place to buy the thing you just tried was Brookstone. As long as the chain's products were genuinely hard to find, the demo floor was a moat. But Brookstone's catalogue drifted from obscure precision tools toward mainstream consumer electronics and giftable novelties — Bluetooth speakers, headphones, drones, charging gear — the exact categories that the internet would flatten into interchangeable commodities sold on price. The store was still a wonderful place to try a speaker. It was no longer the obvious place to buy one.
The Showroom for Somebody Else's Store
By the early 2010s, Brookstone had become the textbook victim of what retailers came to call showrooming: the customer who handles the product in your expensive store and then buys it, on a phone, from a cheaper seller before leaving the parking lot. Brookstone bore the full cost of the experience — the mall lease, the floor staff, the inventory sitting out to be played with — while a website with no demo floor and no rent captured an ever-larger share of the resulting purchase. Worse, much of what Brookstone sold was either available identically online or had a near-clone at a fraction of the price. The chain was, in effect, running a free product-trial service for the broader gadget economy.
Compounding this was the slow emptying of the American mall itself. Brookstone's footprint was concentrated in enclosed shopping malls, and as anchor department stores failed and foot traffic fell through the 2010s, the specialty tenants that depended on browsing traffic — the ones people wandered into rather than drove to — were among the first to feel it. Brookstone needed a steady river of curious passersby to justify its lease, and the river was drying up. The first bankruptcy came in April 2014; the Sanpower-led group that won it at auction paid more than $173 million for a chain whose core problem money could not solve.
The one physical format that kept working was the airport store, and the reason is instructive. An airport traveler is captive, time-rich, and price-insensitive in a way a mall shopper is not — waiting at the gate with cash to burn, unable to comparison-shop a competitor across town, often buying a forgotten charger or a gift in transit. Showrooming requires somewhere else to go; an airport, behind security with a flight to catch, removes the elsewhere. So Brookstone's airport kiosks survived precisely the disease that killed its mall stores, and when the end came in 2018, the airports were the part worth keeping.
The Second Bankruptcy and the Brand That Walked Away
The four years under Sanpower did not reverse the trend; they merely postponed the reckoning. On August 2, 2018, Brookstone filed for Chapter 11 a second time, secured $30 million in financing to keep the lights on through a sale, and announced that all 101 of its remaining U.S. mall stores would close. The filing showed liabilities reported as high as $500 million against assets of $50 million to $100 million — a balance sheet long past saving by operational tweaks. Management cited the "extremely challenging" mall environment, which was true and also a polite way of saying the foundation of the business model had eroded out from under it.
What happened next is why the fate word is online-only rather than liquidated. The mall fleet was shuttered, but the brand had value beyond its leases: a recognizable name, a functioning website, a wholesale business, the airport stores, and a stake in roughly 550 Brookstone-branded stores in China. Bluestar Alliance, a New York brand-management firm, partnered with Apex Digital, a California electronics manufacturer, to buy that bundle. Apex would run the e-commerce and airport operations; Bluestar would license the name onto products. Brookstone the retailer was gone. Brookstone the label survived, stamped on speakers and heated blankets and travel gear, sold online and to a traveler killing time at the gate.
The Five Factors
Aftermath
The 2018 closures ended Brookstone as a mall retailer and put its store employees out of work as the mall fleet wound down through going-out-of-business sales — the demo recliners and display gadgets sold off at markdown, the bright stores emptied. The corporate operation in Merrimack, New Hampshire, that had run a national chain since the catalog days was effectively dissolved into the surviving online and airport business under new owners.
The brand's afterlife is unusually durable for a dead chain, because Brookstone was always as much a name as a store. Under Bluestar Alliance and Apex Digital, the logo continues to sell — on the website, in airport terminals, and licensed onto a range of consumer products — to a public that still associates "Brookstone" with the slightly indulgent gadget gift. The lasting lesson is narrower and sharper than most retail collapses: Brookstone is the clearest case of a chain whose core competency, the hands-on demo, became a liability the instant a cheaper seller could capture the sale the demo created. It built the perfect showroom and then watched the buying happen somewhere else.
Lessons
- If your store's value is letting customers experience a product, make sure you also own the transaction — a demo floor without a captured sale is a free trial service for your cheapest competitor.
- Sell things that are genuinely hard to get; the moment your specialty catalog fills with commodity electronics available identically online, your specialty premium evaporates and only your rent is left.
- Do not chain your fleet to a single declining real-estate format; a chain concentrated in enclosed malls inherits the mall's decline whether or not its own concept still works.
- Read channel, not just product: Brookstone's airport stores survived the disease that killed its mall stores, proving the merchandise was fine and the venue was fatal.
- Treat a second bankruptcy in a healthy economy as a structural verdict; if a capable owner cannot fix the model in four years, the model — not the year — is the thing that needs replacing.