Sounds like a forbidden configuration problem in extremal set theory, hypergraph theory, and design theory. My gut tells me that if someone already studied the problem extensively in one of those fields (without thinking of their applications to other fields), it's most likely phrased this way:
What's the maximum number of edges on a $d$-uniform (hyper)graph avoiding complete ($d$-uniform) sub-(hyper)graphs on $k$ vertices?
If $d=2$, it's just a graph avoiding $K_k$ with as many edges as possible.
You can put it in the language of sets or blocks by regarding edges as $d$-sets or blocks of size $d$. For instance, a $(v, b)$-configuration in combinatorial design theory is a set (or a list) of $b$ blocks whose union is of cardinality $v$. So, the above question is the same as asking the maximum number of blocks avoiding the $\left(k, {{k}\choose{d}}\right)$-configuration.
To translate your problem into this form, consider the missing $d$-sets. Since you chose combinatorial design theory, in the remainder we go with the standard notation in the field.
Let $V$ be a finite set of cardinality $v$ and $\mathcal{B}$ a set of $d$-subsets of $V$. In other words, $V$ is the point set and $\mathcal{B}$ is the block set.
You want any $k$-subset of $V$ to contain at least one block $B \in \mathcal{B}$ as its subset(s). If $k=d$, the problem is trivial because you have to take all the ${{v}\choose{d}}={{v}\choose{k}}$ sets as blocks. The case when $d = 1$ is also trivial; you take distinct $v-k+1$ singletons for $\mathcal{B}$, and that's the optimal one. So we assume that $k > d \geq 2$.
Define $\bar{\mathcal{B}}$ as the ${{v}\choose{d}} - \vert \mathcal{B}\vert$ $d$-sets that are not in $\mathcal{B}$. Take distinct ${{k}\choose{d}}$ blocks $\bar{B}_i$ in $\bar{\mathcal{B}}$. If $\vert \bigcup \bar{B}_i \vert = k$, then all the $d$-subsets of the $k$-set $\bigcup \bar{B}_i$ are in $\bar{\mathcal{B}}$, which means that no block in $\mathcal{B}$ appears in $\bigcup \bar{B}_i$. Conversely, if there is a $k$-subset of $V$ no block of $\mathcal{B}$ appears in, then you end up with distinct ${{k}\choose{d}}$ blocks $\bar{B}_i$ in $\bar{\mathcal{B}}$ with $\vert \bigcup \bar{B}_i \vert = k$.
So, the first requirement in your problem is equivalent to avoiding the distinct ${{k}\choose{d}}$ blocks $\bar{B}_i$ in $\bar{\mathcal{B}}$ with $\vert \bigcup \bar{B}_i \vert = k$ (or equivalently avoiding complete $d$-uniform hypergraph on $k$ vertices in a $d$-uniform hypergraph).
If the size of $\bar{\mathcal{B}}$ is small, it's easy to avoid the forbidden configuration. The more blocks, the harder it becomes to not have one. Now you want to make any point in $V$ appear as few times as possible (or make $r$ as small as possible in your original phrasing). If a set of blocks avoiding the forbidden configuration has theoretically as many blocks as possible, the corresponding $\mathcal{B}$ (which you had in mind) has the smallest possible number of blocks. If every point appears as often in $\mathcal{B}$, this achieves the smallest $r$ possible. So, a lower bound on the maximum $\vert \bar{\mathcal{B}} \vert$ leads to a lower bound on $r$ by assuming each point appears averagely in "optimal" $\mathcal{B}$ and dividing the number of blocks by an appropriate number.
So, the problem of finding a bound on $r$ is now that of finding a lower bound on the maximum number of blocks avoiding complete (hyper)graphs.
If $d = 2$, it's a problem in graph theory. I don't know much about graph theory, but there must be nice results on this kind of forbidden subgraph, I think. So you should check the graph theory literature.
If $d \geq 3$, it's a problem in hypergraph theory (or design theory or extremal set theory). There has to be results on this somewhere, and I'm pretty sure some folks in hypergraph theory and extremal set theory can give you a very good answer. Anyway, as a design theorist, what I'd do first is something like this:
Take uniformly at random $d$-subsets of $V$ with probability $p = c\cdot v^x$, where $c$ and $x$ are constants (of which nice exact values will be chosen later) and $\vert V \vert = v$.
The expected value of the number $f_k$ of forbidden configurations you get is upper bounded by ${{v}\choose{k}}\cdot p^{{k}\choose{d}}$. By Markov's Inequality, the probability that you wind up with twice as many as or more than the average is smaller than or equal to $\frac{1}{2}$. Hence, you have the probably $P(f_k \leq 2{{v}\choose{k}}\cdot p^{{k}\choose{d}}) \geq \frac{1}{2}$.
Let $t$ be the random variable counting the number of blocks and $E(t)$ its expected value. Then $E(t) = {{v}\choose{d}}p$. Because $t$ is a binomial random variable, by Chernoff's inequality, for sufficiently large $v$ we have
$P\left(t < \frac{E(t)}{2}\right) < e^{-\frac{E(t)}{8}} < \frac{1}{2}$ (if we choose $c$ and $x$ wisely). Hence, if $v$ is sufficiently large, with positive probability we end up with block set $\mathcal{B}$, where $\vert\mathcal{B}\vert > {{v}\choose{d}}p$ and there are at most $2{{v}\choose{k}}\cdot p^{{k}\choose{d}}$ forbidden configurations. Deleting one block from each forbidden configuration will give you the desired complete-graph-free block set. Hence, with positive probability you can have at least ${{v}\choose{d}}p - 2{{v}\choose{k}}\cdot p^{{k}\choose{d}}$ blocks while avoiding unwanted guys.
So, our task is now to choose $c$ and $x$ for $p=c\cdot v^x$ so that the above number is the largest. The best you can do is, I think, pick $x$ so that the two terms ${{v}\choose{d}}p$ and $2{{v}\choose{k}}\cdot p^{{k}\choose{d}}$ are of the same order, and then set $c$ so that the former becomes strictly larger; this way you get the best order in terms of $v$'s function. If it doesn't work (e.g., $c$ must be egregiously tiny to do this but the background of your problem doesn't want $v$ really large), you lower $x$ a tiny bit, and the number of blocks becomes big and positive for sufficiently (but not unrealistically) large $v$.
This is just an off-the-top-of-my-head answer, so there has to be a much better way to attack this. The problem may have already be solved somewhere. I might have even botched mathematics in this post somewhere... But I guess at least this way of viewing your problem helps.