Cost of Living·JARGON OF THE WEEK

Deciphering the jargon of the Starbucks "Third Place"

Starbucks is "re-imagining the third space" with the launch of a futuristic new store that's just a pickup window with a screen. So is the "third space" important or just a collection of meaningless buzzwords?

Is it an important space or just a collection of meaningless buzzwords?

A Starbucks is pictured in this 2019 file photo on Front Street in Toronto. (Michael Wilson/CBC)

Is the way a take-out coffee giant refers to its retail spaces a meaningful term? Or is it just corporate jargon.

At The Cost of Living, we answer questions like this through our Jargon of the Week segment.
First up — Starbucks.

In a press release, Starbucks just unveiled a new concept, Starbucks Pickup.
It's a futuristic new store in Toronto that has no tables, no chairs — it's really just a pickup window with a screen.

The company called it "the first piece of the company vision to re-imagine the 'third place'."

But what is this third place that Starbucks refers to, and is it really anything new?

Update: origin of terminology

Since the original broadcast of this story, Cost of Living has learned:

  • The "third place" is a concept originally explained by American sociologist Ray Oldenberg.
  • In his 1989 book, The Great Good Place: Cafes, Coffee Shops, Bookstores, Bars, Hair Salons, and Other Hangouts at the Heart of a Community, Oldenberg defines third places as informal gathering sites where people gather between home and work.

Click "listen" above to hear the segment, or download the Cost of Living podcast.