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Global Arches
McDonald's has an architectural formula for any city on the
planet, and it's as standardized as the burgers.
[Originally published in Architecture,
December 2001]
In Fast Food Nation, Eric Schlosser's remarkable study of
the growth of restaurant conglomerates, the McDonald's Corporation
is synonymous with sprawl. Since Ray Kroc bought Richard and
Maurice McDonald's restaurant business in 1955 and began to
streamline the founding brothers' process, the company's fortunes
have been linked to the car-fueled expansion of the American
habitat. Using Colorado Springs, Colorado, as his anytown,
Schlosser writes that fast food chains like McDonald's "feed
off the sprawl . . . accelerate it, and help set is visual
tone." McDonald's is the market leader among companies
that "look at cars the way predators view herds of prey."
The premise of McDonald's is that each product, and the experience
of consuming it, is unrelentingly consistent. Both its strength
as a brand and its efficiency as a company depend on providing
a uniform experience in its 29,000 restaurants worldwide,
right down to the architecture. Designing each McDonald's
is as consistent a process as making french fries.
Ninety-three percent of all McDonald's built in the United
States are designed bya 58-person team of architects, engineers,
and interior and facility designers in the company's Oak Brook,
Illinois, headquarters. "We have designs ready from buildings
from 800 square feet up to 10,000 square feet," says
Fred Matthias, the company's vice president of restaurant
design, who oversees the Oak Brook team. Centralizing the
design process saves the company money. As Matthias points
out, "we're more efficient than hiring local architects."
Because in the United States its product is, for the most
part, an "impulse buy," and because its customer
base depends on automobile traffic, McDonad's is always looking
for areas likely to experience steady growth. Schools were
Ray Kroc's first indicator of growth, and later the company
looked, by helicopter, for cheap land likely to become suburban.
In recent years, McDonald's has created a line of software
called Quintillion, now a standalone company, which automates
analysis of specific market opportunities through a combination
of satellite imagery, demographic information, and existing
sales information.
McDonald's domestic operations are divided into three divisions:
East, West, and Central. Once the division's real estate managers
have identified a site for development, construction specialists
arrive and perform a "site investigation" - they
research local zoning codes, issue a soil report, and measure
the lot. In addition, the real estate group identifies local
demographics: whether most customers will come from a specific
age group, how many have children, whether they will arrive
by car or on foot. Then, the regional manager decides whether
the site is financially feasible, and once that manager signs
off, the design group goes to work.
A former architectural consultant to the company says that
"at McDonald's there is no overview of the total design."
The parts of each restaurant come from separate company offices.
"There are food-service people and advertising people,
there's the local franchisee and his wife, who will throw
up some curtains and some bamboo, and there's the playland
designers." The design team then assembles these components
says, like a restaurant worker assembling a Big Mac.
"When we design, we have to keep regional concerns in
mind," says Matthias. "We have different seating
capacities, different parking requirements, different signage
ordinances. So you may see different signage configurations,
but you see a consistent idea." Matthias and his team
provide McDonald's real-estate managers with roughly 12 to
15 possible configurations for the average restaurant. But
one thing always remains the same. "We never give up
the yellow arch."
According to Schlosser's history of the ocmapny, the McDonald's
Corporation was a pioneer in the standardization of retail.
IN the 1960s, Schlosser writes, the company tore down most
of the original restaurants, designed by founder Richard McDonald.
Those restaurants featured a yellow arch at either end of
the building, which, to passing motorists, appeared as an
M. For an untrained architect, it was an extraordinary, almost
Venturian combination of logo and architecture, building and
sign. Kroc then replaced the old buildings with brick walls
and a mansard roof, and psychologist and design consultant
Louis Cheskin convinced the company to retain the symbolic
arches (calling them "mother McDonald's breasts"),
and to collapse them into the now-famous symbol.
The design of the freestanding restaurants has since expanded
to include everything from Chalet to brick box. The design
team also works on adapting restaurants to a wide range of
special situations: malls, zoos, airports, and office buildings.
Playgrounds (called "playlands") are added to restaurants
in modular fashion. There are 8,000 such playgrounds in the
U.S., designed to capture not just children, but their parents'
dollars by extension.
As the world's largest owner of commercial property, McDonald's
is, for all intents and purposes, a real estate company. The
company's decentralized franchise system, whereby private
owners buy a franchise form the company and pay rent for the
right to operate restaurants, allows the company to offload
the burden of managing the minutiae of the business onto the
franchisee, and receive a lump sum instead. Because it almost
always owns the land and buildings, McDonald's exerts enormous
control over the design of its franchises, and can revoke
the franchise and shutter the restaurant at a moment's notice
-- 372 franchises have been closed in the company's history,
(This explains, in part, the fact that no franchise has ever
successfully unionized its workers.)
"A lot of our operators are very interested in the design
of the building," says John Reinertsen, a senior director
in McDonald's Integrated Restaurant Innovation group. "We
want the franchisees to be entrepreneurial, but we need to
have a clear thread that runs through the brand. There are
categories of the design - like signage and graphics - that
have to be consistent."
The company is reaching its saturation point in parts of
the United States where the restaurants sit so close to one
another that a new McDonald's will steal sales from an existing
one. Three hundred new McDonald's were built in the United
States last year, but next year, the company has said it will
scale back new construction by 200 restaurants, appeasing
the fears of existing franchise operators.
The company is experimenting with new business models and
the architectural forms that will go with them, however. A
team within McDonald's, in partnership with the San Francisco
office of Gensler, created two prototype restaurants in 1998
and experimented with new forms of signage, traffic flow,
and kitchen design. "We developed a lab in a warehouse,
where we could mock up the restaurant, complete with a live,
functioning kitchen," says Reinertsen. "We mocked
up the lobby out of foam core and plywood." The company
then sent focus groups through the system, 100 people at a
time, to simulate a lunch rush.
Bill Aumiller, principal of Aumiller Youngquist, in Mt. Prospect,
Illinois, helped create a prototype "diner-style"
McDonald's in Kokomo, Indiana, last year. In the restaurant,
patrons order from their seats by phone, and eat such uncharacteristic
McDonald's fare as steak. (A knife-and-fork meal is a departure
from Ray Kroc's original business model, which depended on
finger food to save money on utensils.) Aumiller says the
company plans to build 10 such diners in Evansville, Indiana,
next year, to test how well a constellation of diners might
perform in a given market.
More than half of McDonald's restaurants - roughly 16,200
- are outside the U.S. Foreign restaurants account for more
than 60 percent of company sales, and 50 percent of profits.
Some countries have hosted a McDonald's outlet for more than
25 years.
The international arm of McDonald's has presented extraordinary
design challenges to a corporation that prides itself on uniformity.
"In Saudi Arabia, each restaurant is really two restaurants,"
says Ron Boneau, senior director for international development.
"One section is for single men, the other for families."
The booths of the family section have doors and walls so women
can unveil and eat without being seen by other men. And five
times each day the restaurant must shut down entirely for
prayer. "If you're inside when they close," Boneau
says, "you're locked in."
Boneau and his team work hard to fit into specific markets
- bicycle parking in China, motorcycle parking in Taiwan,
prayer rooms for employees in Indonesia. But Boneau strives
to make the fewest possible adjustments to the American model.
"I'll take a set of drawings from the U.S. and say 'This
is where we begin.' Then you adapt to code requirements, hurricanes,
earthquakes, the local building industry, and the culture."
As much as possible, the process is centralized. "We
used to hire local architects," Boneau says. But now
they act only as "local experts to help us understand
code requirements and the rest." The company is extremely
strict about the process. "I've learned the hard way
that you can't just let local architects loose. We're McDonald's.
We have our own way of doing things."
The sometimes alarming loyalty of McDonald's employees sets
them apart from the cantankerous veterans of private architecture
firms. One can't help wondering what the appeal is. Fred Matthias,
an 18-year McDonald's employee, was a partner in an architecture
firm for 10 years, worked on an administrative building for
McDonald's and was asked to join the company. "I love
the brand and what it stands for," he explains. "And
I love the passion that the people here bring to it."
Ron Boneau's background is construction. He worked as a project
manager for McDonald's in Florida before becoming an executive
at the company. He has worked for McDonald's for 29 years;
19 of them on international development. He is cryptic when
asked what he thinks of his job. "All the bad is good,
and all the good is bad."
Boneau will admit, however, to a special thrill when he ventures
out of a foreign city into the countryside. "I'll find
myself in a place where there are no billboards, no radio,
no television," he says. "there will be a small
child who doesn't speak English, he'll see the ring I wear
on my finger, and he'll say to me, 'McDonald's!' That's a
great feeling." |