As new businesses move in, original Lakeside Pharmacy icons say goodbye — for now

The building was vacated in 2014 after Larry Coh, pharmacist and owner for 44 years, retired. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
The building was vacated in 2014 after Larry Coh, pharmacist and owner for 44 years, retired. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
The Lake Anne of Reston Condominium Association donated the icons to the Reston Historic Trust & Museum this month. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
The Lake Anne of Reston Condominium Association donated the icons to the Reston Historic Trust & Museum this month. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
The icons will be placed in storage until they can be reinstalled at a new location in the plaza. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
The icons will be placed in storage until they can be reinstalled at a new location in the plaza. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
The icons were designed by Chermayeff and Geismar, a New York Graphic design firm known for creating logos for NBC and PBS. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
The icons were designed by Chermayeff and Geismar, a New York Graphic design firm known for creating logos for NBC and PBS. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
Locally, the firm designed many of the plaza’s original storefronts. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
Locally, the firm designed many of the plaza’s original storefronts. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
A new hair salon will also take up the other half of the old pharmacy location near the lakeside. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
A new hair salon will also take up the other half of the old pharmacy location near the lakeside. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
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The building was vacated in 2014 after Larry Coh, pharmacist and owner for 44 years, retired. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
The Lake Anne of Reston Condominium Association donated the icons to the Reston Historic Trust & Museum this month. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
The icons will be placed in storage until they can be reinstalled at a new location in the plaza. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
The icons were designed by Chermayeff and Geismar, a New York Graphic design firm known for creating logos for NBC and PBS. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
Locally, the firm designed many of the plaza’s original storefronts. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)
A new hair salon will also take up the other half of the old pharmacy location near the lakeside. (Courtesy Charlotte Geary)

Lake Anne Plaza is turning a new leaf as iconic, quirky pharmacy icons that once served as advertisements for the Lakeside Pharmacy, a legacy Lake Anne Plaza store, were removed this week.

The building, which was vacated in 2014 after Larry Cohn, pharmacist and owner for 44 years, retired. Now, two new businesses — a hair salon and a cycling studio — will open up in the former pharmacy location, which remained vacant since September 2014.

The Lake Anne of Reston Condominium Association donated the icons to the Reston Historic Trust & Museum this month. They will be placed in storage until they can be reinstalled at a new location in the plaza.

“New businesses are moving into the old pharmacy and because the icons do not reflect the new businesses coming in, it was determined that they would be removed with the idea that they would be preserved,” said Alexandra Campbell.

Liz Kamp, a Reston resident, hopes to open her indoor cycling studio, New Trail Cycling Studio, sometime in September in the former pharmacy pace.

Inspired by the original icons, Kamp said she’s in the process of seeking design approval for a new cycling-related icon similar to the old icons.

“I, too, loved the icons and would love to honor the history of the space,” Kamp said. She has lived in Reston for about a decade.

The icons were designed by Chermayeff and Geismar, a New York Graphic design firm known for creating logos for NBC and PBS. Locally, the firm designed many of the plaza’s original storefronts.

A new hair salon will also take up the other half of the old pharmacy location near the lakeside. The owner was not immediately available for comment.

Plans for the relocation of the icons are not final. The Reston Historic Trust & Museum plans to raise funds to help preserve the icons.

Photos by Charlotte Geary

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