Beautiful Legacy

16 Episodes
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By: Tiago Pinto

This is Beautiful Legacy, a podcast about creators and the traces they leave in the world. Twice a week, in just five minutes, we’ll get to know some of these stories. A glimpse into the life, the work, and the lasting mark they’ve left behind. Out on Tuesdays and Thursdays.

Ramón Areces Rodríguez - The Builder of Spain's Middle Class
#16
Today at 7:10 AM

In this episode of Beautiful Legacy, we explore the life and influence of Ramón Areces Rodríguez, the discreet entrepreneur who helped shape modern Spain through retail.

 

Starting from a small tailor’s shop in Madrid in 1935, Areces went on to build El Corte Inglés into a national institution. But this is not a story about scale alone. It is a story about how shopping became a cultural force - how clarity, trust, service, and aspiration were woven into everyday life at a time when Spain was emerging from scarcity.

 

This...


Harry Gordon Selfridge - The Theater of Shopping
#15
Last Tuesday at 7:10 AM

In this episode of Beautiful Legacy, we explore the life and influence of Harry Gordon Selfridge, the man who transformed shopping from a necessity into a cultural experience.

 

Arriving in London in 1909, Selfridge opened a department store unlike anything Europe had seen before. Inspired by American retail but driven by a deeper understanding of human desire, he turned commerce into theatre. Window displays became storytelling devices. Products were placed within reach. Cafés, exhibitions and events transformed a shop visit into a social ritual.

 

Selfridge believed that people did not simply buy...


Margaret Forde - The Theatre of Commerce
#15
12/23/2025

In this episode of Beautiful Legacy, we explore the overlooked yet foundational legacy of Margaret Forde, the creative force who turned department-store windows into stages of modern culture.

 

Working behind the scenes at Selfridges under the vision of Gordon Selfridge, Forde brought theatrical discipline to retail display. She introduced narrative, lighting, rhythm and scenography to shop windows, transforming Oxford Street façades into public performances that stopped crowds, sparked conversation, and reframed shopping as entertainment.

 

This episode traces how Forde imported the language of theatre into commerce, treating glass as a pro...


Sir Terence Conran - The Designer of Modern Britain
#14
12/18/2025

This episode of Beautiful Legacy travels back to Britain in the 1960s, when the high street was still ruled by heavy furniture, closed cabinets, and uninspired shopkeeping.

At the centre of this shift stands Sir Terence Conran - the founder of Habitat, creator of The Conran Shop, and the figure who turned retail into a cultural force.

 

Conran did not simply sell furniture or homeware.

He redesigned the store itself using space, materials, and storytelling to educate taste and democratise modern design. From Habitat’s room layouts to his restaurants, books, and...


Bill Bernbach - The Modern Creative Agency
#13
12/16/2025

Bill Bernbach didn’t just change advertising, he rewrote how the business operates.

In this episode, we explore how the founder of DDB dismantled the industrial model of the agency and introduced the creative team as we know it today: copywriter and art director, thinking as one. We revisit the organisational principles that shaped DDB’s culture, and the iconic work that proved the model.

A reflection on the human, ethical and structural legacy that still governs the way the world creates ideas.


Raymond Loewy - (The First) Designer of Everything
#12
12/11/2025

Raymond Loewy reshaped the modern retail world long before brands understood what coherence could achieve. From Coca-Cola machines to Sears catalogues, from locomotives to Lucky Strike packs, he built the radical idea that every product, package and environment must belong to the same visual world. This episode traces how Loewy transformed commercial design into a unified system and how his principles still structure today’s fashion chains, supermarkets, dealerships and global retail equipment. A story of discipline, clarity and the designer who taught the world that a brand it is a world in itself.


Lilly Reich - The Invention of Modern Display
#11
12/09/2025

Before “visual merchandising” existed as a discipline, Lilly Reich was already defining its rules. From Berlin’s Wertheim department store to the Velvet and Silk Café, she transformed fabrics, light and proportion into tools of architecture. This episode explores how her methodical approach to order shaped the modern language of retail and exhibition design.

 

Today, we see her influence everywhere - in the clarity of Apple Stores, the spatial rhythm of COS, the functional calm of MUJI, and the curated vitrines of luxury fashion houses. Reich didn’t just design displays; she built the foundations of how the...


Frank Gehry - Building Destinations
#10
12/07/2025

Frank Gehry reshaped the world’s understanding of architecture by proving that a building can be a destination, a force capable of transforming cities, economies and culture.

This episode explores how his audacity gave rise to the modern “destination economy,” and why today’s world feels and looks the way it does because of him.


Victor Gruen - The Accidental Mall-Maker
#9
12/04/2025

Victor Gruen set out to recreate the civic life of Vienna in the heart of American suburbia - instead became the reluctant father of the shopping mall. This episode traces his idealistic vision, the commercial forces that reshaped it, and the global standards his work left behind. From the birth of Southdale to the rise of the “Gruen Transfer,” we explore how one architect’s dream of community transformed into a worldwide retail blueprint.


Anita Roddick - The Business of Conscience
#8
12/02/2025

Anita Roddick transformed retail by giving business a conscience. From a small Brighton shop with refillable bottles and honest labels, she built The Body Shop into a global movement for ethical beauty. This episode explores how she turned activism into a retail model, using transparency, fair trade, and human rights campaigns to challenge an entire industry. Her legacy endures in today’s standards - cruelty-free products, sustainable sourcing, and brands that stand for something. A story of purpose, protest, and the belief that commerce can be a force for good.


Walt Disney - The Architect of Wonder
#7
11/27/2025

Walt Disney transformed imagination into architecture. This episode explores how his upbringing, his cinematic approach to storytelling, and his groundbreaking work with the Imagineers led to the creation of the modern theme park. From Main Street U.S.A. to Tomorrowland, we examine how Disney’s vision reshaped the experience economy and set the global standard for immersive worlds. A legacy that continues to shape how we play, explore, and dream today.


Charlotte Perriand - Modern Space Made Human
#6
11/25/2025

Charlotte Perriand is often celebrated for her modernist furniture, but her true legacy lives in the commercial and exhibition spaces she shaped. From post-war design salons to the boutiques of Les Arcs, she transformed modern environments into warm, human-centred experiences. This episode explores how Perriand brought clarity and comfort to the world of retail and how her ideas still define how we shop and move through modern space.


Don Watt - The Store Is The Brand
#5
11/20/2025

Don Watt redefined modern retail by proving that the store itself is the brand.

From The Home Depot’s unified orange world to Loblaws’ “value made visible,” he built environments where packaging, signage, layout and colour spoke one coherent language. Today’s expectation that a store must be readable, consistent and strategic is the legacy he left behind.


Gae Aulenti - The Space Between Eras
#4
11/18/2025

Gae Aulenti transformed forgotten buildings into cultural landmarks, proving that history and modernity can coexist without compromise. From her early days in Udine to her landmark conversion of the Gare d’Orsay into the Musée d’Orsay, she redefined adaptive reuse and shaped a global standard for restoring, rather than replacing, the past. Her work shows that innovation can honour memory, and that architecture can be both contemporary and timeless.


Florence Knoll - The Designer of Corporate Life
#3
11/13/2025

Florence Knoll transformed the modern office from a cluttered, status-driven environment into a space of clarity, function, and elegance.

Orphaned at a young age and trained under design legends like Mies van der Rohe and Eliel Saarinen, she absorbed the discipline of modernism and applied it to the most influential interior revolution of the 20th century.


Massimo Vignelli -The Order of Things
#2
11/11/2025

Massimo Vignelli believed beauty came from order, not ornament. From Milan to New York, he built systems that brought clarity to chaos - from the disciplined grids of his books to the logic of the city’s subway signs. His legacy reminds us that design, at its purest, is an act of respect for the human eye - and for the world it shapes.