Toronto Star

Iconic mattress testing new waters

Waterbed industry aspires to shed kitschy reputation, gears up for a comeback

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

The waterbed industry has had its ups and downs over the decades. Mostly downs if you’re looking at the past 30 years.

But its most ardent supporters are buoyed by a modern wave of beds they say could shake its kitschy reputation once and for all, and maybe even bring it back into the mainstream.

Yes, the waterbed — that once-groovy emblem of the subversive ’60s and sexy ’70s — is not only still around, but gearing up for a comeback to mark its 50th anniversar­y in 2018.

“My theory is there’s a whole generation that was spawned on a waterbed,” says the bed’s inventor, Charlie Hall.

“They’re going to swim upstream like salmon and buy another one.”

The 74-year-old says he’s designed a new product for a generation that never got to experience the freeform beds the first time around, back when his radical take on a mattress became a powerful symbol for a macrame-loving countercul­ture.

A modern-day penchant for mattresses that contour and conform fits in well with the inherent properties of water, he says.

“It’s hard to believe it’s 50 years but . . . the whole interest (now is) conforming and comfort and pillow-tops and then memory foam and all that,” Hall says. “If you read the ads, they read like waterbed ads.”

Hall, who lives on Bainbridge Island, Wash., says his new bed will debut in February, his first new waterbed in more than 30 years. It will be “very waveless” and the same size as a traditiona­l mattress.

“It looks like a convention­al bed (but) it has a more compliant top on it so when you lay down on it you get more of the waterbed feel, which was always distinctiv­ely different than a regular mattress,” Hall says. “And it controls temperatur­e — you can have it warmer or cooler, set it the way you want, even right and left side if you have different preference­s.”

Missing from his pitch is mention of any sensuous attributes — the key marketing tactic that both vaulted, and possibly killed, the original waterbed.

Hall debuted his creation in 1968 at San Francisco State University where he was an industrial design student. Dubbed the “pleasure pit,” it generated instant media attention for its promise of sexual exploits.

The following year, he began a twoman production in Sausalito, Calif., crafting redwood frames by hand. Innerspace Environmen­ts would eventually grow to 32 retail stores in California.

But in San Francisco, they were originally sold in head shops, Hall says. “They would sell a bong and a waterbed. I didn’t intend it that way, but that’s what happened,” he shrugs, suspecting that too limited the market despite famous devotees including Hugh Hefner.

Indeed, the bed was tailor-made for the anti-establishm­ent of the era.

The slogan of the industry was: “We are the sleep revolution,” recalls Andre Kocsis, whose Toronto company Halcyon Waterbeds launched in1971.

Kocsis admits that much of the waterbed industry was amateurish, citing wanton trade shows in the early ’70s featuring cocaine and prostitute­s. “It was a bunch of hippies that had no business experience that got into a product which just grew explosivel­y. I mean, at its peak, the waterbed industry was a $2-billion industry,” says Kocsis, citing an oft-touted tally from the U.S. waterbed industry at the time.

Fears over leaks, the heavy load, ongoing maintenanc­e and seasicknes­s kept many from trying waterbeds out. But those who took the plunge were quick converts, says Kocsis, and generated strong wordof-mouth business.

By 1980, Kocsis says he had a staff of 300 and was doubling and tripling yearly sales: “We had a stallion that was running at full speed and all I could do was hang on.”

The eventual decline would be swift too, he says.

Appeal tapered in the late ’80s and early ’90s, just as society shifted to a new conservati­sm and focus on family values. The industry tried to adapt with soft-sided and waveless ver- sions that mimicked the convention­al spring mattresses, but it was hard to shake a reputation ingrained through tag lines such as those on one early ad: “Two things are better on a waterbed. One of them is sleeping.”

“Those things all came back to haunt the industry,” Kocsis says.

Interest has admittedly plummeted since then, but demand persists, insists Mike Cleaver, owner of Waterbed Gallery in Barrie, Ont. He believes the time is ripe for a comeback.

“It’s been a long time, but the core values of sleeping on water are starting to come back to people,” says Cleaver, who entered the business in 1980.

Still, Edward Leon, president of the furniture chain Leon’s, doesn’t see a market, calling the waterbed “very niche.”

“I don’t see that coming back in a big way under any circumstan­ces,” says Leon, who guesses waterbeds represente­d about15 per cent of bedding sales in Canada at its peak.

“There’s always niche players in everything, so if you’re the only person selling them in Toronto, you might have some success with it.”

 ?? STEPHAN POTOPNYK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Mike Cleaver, owner of Waterbed Gallery in Barrie, Ont., believes the time is ripe for a waterbed comeback.
STEPHAN POTOPNYK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Mike Cleaver, owner of Waterbed Gallery in Barrie, Ont., believes the time is ripe for a waterbed comeback.

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