As charlie said in the comments, I have unlimited ink. I wrote this from memory, not notes and previous writings, so I didn't have "everything" when I first published it. I've added a bunch of items in the programming section, as I've remembered.
The idea is to also leverage the Market's status as a public and civic and community and nonprofit asset, and do things that a for profit food hall or market isn't likely to do, because it builds the community as a whole, beyond contributing to marginal revenue of the property asset.
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Eastern Market, from the 600 block of C Street SE. Flickr photo by MrTinMD.I got involved in Eastern Market because my mentor in historic preservation was one of the people who helped prevent the market from being converted into a food court in the late 1980s.
In 2005, I served on the advisory committee for the International Public Markets Conference which covered both DC and Baltimore that year, led a tour, etc. In 2007, I was appointed to serve on the Community Advisory Committee, representing the Eastern Market Preservation and Development Corporation. I stepped down when we moved to Salt Lake in late 2019, although I thought at the time somehow I'd be maintaining residences in both places.
EMPDC was created by the Barry Administration to be a CDC and to take over management of the market, but vendors and other stakeholders fought the idea, and the market remained managed by the city--for a time by a putative nonprofit--with different spaces, like North Hall (arts) and Sunday under the shed run by different entities. Plus the flea market on the then Hine School parking lot, also separate.
Flickr photo by Dan Malouff.Stuff I suggested over the years. I was "the youngest person" on the board for a long time, and the outlier. I suggested many things over the years including:
-- creating a transportation management district for the Capitol Hill area, serving Eastern Market. I first proposed to the city creating TMDs in 2005/2006. They still haven't. I first thought this for H Street, but it's relevant to Capitol Hill and other districts throughout the city. I mentioned it over time.
A big thing was parking and mobility coordination, for example the way Hyattsville does it for their Arts District.
-- offer a joint delivery service from the market at least within the neighborhood as a basic transportation demand management measure. The vendors kept whining about how residents couldn't drive and park, how supermarkets have free parking, etc. My point was that if they didn't have to carry purchases back, they didn't need to drive to the market, and you could move multiple people at a time in an electric shuttle.
For a time a shuttle service was created by some of the area businesses to try to capture patrons to the Washington Nationals stadium, although the concept failed because there just was too much distance, and over time eater-tainment businesses developed around the stadium.
-- Create the Capitol Hill Destination Development, Management, and Marketing Plan. This combined tourism and arts elements and was aimed at not only planning and coordinated marketing, but also getting all the various cultural assets to work together including Eastern Market, the Southeast Library, Capitol Hill Arts Workshop, galleries, the Eastern Market Metro Plaza, Seward Park, Hill Center, other arts groups, St. Peter's Church (they have an amazing Tiffany stained glass window), potentially Congressional Cemetery, the Library of Congress, that church on 8th Street SE that also shows movies (I think it was a theater before, where I saw New Jack City in 1988), Folger Library and Theater, etc. This should include a cultural plan element.
The idea was to be able to organize a day's worth of tourism activities in the area, including some shopping. And to get funding from Destination DC to do it. In other cities, not Washington, the city tourism agency generally funds a variety of sub-city initiatives.
As part of this, extend the special pavement of the 200 block of 7th Street to around Eastern Market Plaza (both sides) to knit this area together (this is rementioned below as appropriate). People thought that would denigrate the Market building by making it less special.
-- Why the f* does the area have all these different organizations than one larger, better funded and supported bigger group? There is the merchants association, a Main Street program for 8th Street, A SEPARATE MAIN STREET PROGRAM FOR PART OF PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE AND 7TH STREET!!!!!!!!, another not served commercial district on the 200 and 300 blocks of Pennsylvania, one by Potomac Metro, the Eastern Market, etc. at least have a combined single Main Street program and include the 200 and 300 blocks too.
-- Make Eastern Market Metro Plaza great. I participated in a workshop on the plaza led by Project for Public Spaces and Scenic America in 2004 (write up). It laid the groundwork for connecting civic assets.
Later, as part of BicycleSpace, a bicycle facilities system integration firm, I put together a proposal for activation including a water sculpture, lighting of the Metro Station escalator canopy, and multiple forms of secure, special bike parking. Barracks Row Main Street got earmarks and did stuff, but I haven't seen it. The gd contractor on the master plan kept refusing my request to ask for their plans. I do know currently there are big disorder and management issues.
-- One of my later ideas in terms of the Destination Development Plan was to build a visitor center in the Metro Station, not unlike the visitor center in Pioneer Courthouse Square in Portland. It could also function as a transit service center.
-- Put historic (brown) highway signage for Capitol Hill and Eastern Market on the Southeast/Southwest Freeway.
Master Plan contract, 2019. The anniversary ("
Everyone has a memory | Eastern Market celebrates 150 years," WUSA-TV) reminds me that I got dissed in the process of landing a master plan contract for the future of the market.
But me and the other guy an architect who were the leads didn't have prime contractor status, so we had to work with another group, and it turns out the one he chose--that had great local credibility--were more interested in paying their own staff, definitely not me, and demoting me from being one of the team leaders to a putz (I didn't handle that well, which led to me being canned).
To win, I gave the presentation of my life (after one of the other team members gave one of the worst), landed JLL as a member of the team, and wrote the initial market analysis. We beat out a lot of other quite reputable firms.
Because of my work in commercial district revitalization and having been on the board for 13 years I had a very good handle on the market conditions in the retail trade area, and all of the competition EM faces from nearby entertainment districts like Union Market, Navy Yard, The Wharf, H Street NE, Downtown, etc.
Another potential competitor in the future is a revived RFK district with a new football stadium.
Eastern Market is in one of the toughest food sales retail trade areas in the country. In a 3 mile radius there are almost 15 other supermarkets, from upscale to discount, plus multiple entertainment districts to compete with. And Union Market is a vicious competitor. E.g., they just opened a Sunday outdoor farmers market ("Union Market Is Getting A Farmers Market Beginning Sept. 17," DCist).
What I would have proposed if I didn't get canned
I have no idea what they ended up with. I imagine it was mostly wasted.
Recommendation for how Eastern Market should be managed: an independent nonprofit. An article, "West Side Market to transition to nonprofit management," in the Cleveland Plan Dealer reports that the West Side Market there is moving to nonprofit management, while the city will still own the building.
This was proposed a number of years ago for EM, first in the Barry Administration and then around 2012-2013, but the vendors fought it, with the support of now Mayor Muriel Bowser.
The thing is, cities just don't have the chops to run retail businesses, although granted some public markets in a couple places are run by cities and they aren't absolutely bad (Lancaster Market is run by its city, but with a semi-independent market manager who doesn't treat it as a government job). But the ability to be creative and to take risks is generally absent when the city runs the space.
I suggested that the Capitol Hill BID, granted not particularly visionary either, could be the entity, because the Milwaukee City BID was so successful in taking over its downtown market, after an underfunded nonprofit couldn't pull it off ("
Milwaukee Public Market gets back to business,"
Milwaukee Business Journal).
But a nonprofit could do it, modeled after the Main Street program, but it would need to shake up what it draws from current board membership, because the EM Citizens Advisory Committee is "stodgy."
Basically, it's back to the concept of the Eastern Market Preservation and Development Corporation. It's rare for me to say, but Marion Barry was right! Note that the 1987 Plan for the Market still reads well.
Using the Main Street Approach to increase civic engagement and citizen involvement. But at the same time, I wouldn't make the management all top-down. I would use the Main Street Model. It links business and property owners with citizens and other stakeholders, organizing work into committees, where they develop action plans for the year.
It's mostly used for commercial districts, and there's one for 7th Street already (crazy, but that's another story). But it works for civic assets too, like public markets, museums, and other public serving and facing assets.
The committees would concern design and maintenance, business development and recruitment, organizational development including fundraising and organizational communications, and what the model calls "promotion," which includes generally marketing of the building/district, special events and programming, and cross promotion between businesses.
Oversight would have to be shared between the BID and citizens involved in the Eastern Market oversight and action committee. In a way, this carries on the spirit of the Eastern Market Citizen Advisory Committee but in a more professional and organized manner.
Why independent management? Creativity and eater-tainment in markets and market districts: from Florida Market to Union Market. The point about creativity in food halls, public markets, and market districts is made "indirectly," in a recent feature in the Washington Post, "A D.C. foodie’s guide: All the places to eat and drink at Union Market," about the Union Market district north of EM by a couple miles. (There is also the semi-public seafood market at The Wharf in the SW Waterfront.)
Wayfinding and interpretation signage that Christopher Taylor Edwards and I developed as a concept to illustrate gaps in the DC wayfinding signage system, using the Florida Market as an example. We did this in 2008 or 2009.I was involved in helping "to save" that area c. 2006 and beyond, although what it's become is perhaps far beyond what I suggested, "Retail planning and Florida Market," 2009. But I had the basic ideas down.
Not only did the Edens real estate firm revive the old DC Farmers Market building, they supported the development of a Latino market too, La Cosecha, and the integration of other food and drink related businesses in the broader district, the way it was long ago. A lot of this was led by one of their early hires, who came from Jose Andres' restaurant group.
Cannon's Steak House was a premier restaurant in the old Florida Market District, just like St. Anselm's is today. Postcard image.Reading the article, I was struck about the level of business turnover--change is good, but there's a lot of lost capital in high turnover--in the main building.
There are maybe two vendors that date to before the changes, a handful from the original launch, and mostly new vendors.
The contrast with Eastern Market is telling. There is no real turnover of businesses, or ways to add new businesses, except outside on the weekly outdoor market line on the weekends.
Eastern Market is the epitome of static, Union Market the epitome of dynamic. The reality is that you need to keep changing things up to get people to return again and again, while at the same time maintaining a strong group of core destination businesses.
Contrast Eastern Market to most food halls. EM also closes at 7 pm!
Although granted food halls are mostly about prepared foods, not buying foods to cook later. But definitely eater-tainment.
Eastern Market loses out on the dinner and night demographic.
The building design changes I was going to propose (I'm glad I didn't give them to them)
1. Reconfigure the current market hall (South Hall) to add businesses, maybe some permanent, some short term. The point was to introduce change and dynamism.
2. Would it be possible to drop the on the floor walk-in refrigerators into the basement to add selling space?, although yes it would be less convenient for those vendors. But you don't want refrigerators taking up potential selling space. You want to maximize active, usable, revenue generating space.
3. Add a mezzanine for seating in the South Hall, using the Indianapolis City Market and Baltimore's old Lexington Market as examples. (I haven't seen the new Lexington yet.)
Bradbury Building
Note this might be impossible because there is interior historic designation on the building. Also buildings like the Bradbury Building in LA and the National Building Museum with amazing ornamental metwalwork as examples. It would also afford the ability for patrons to actually be able to look at the historic trusses and other architectural and engineering elements related to the roof.
I would have recommended making the argument that it was worth the change for providing visual access to the under roof elements. Otherwise, I was prepared to recommend buying out the easement.
4. Convert North Hall to food related businesses, including a demonstration/teaching kitchen (Reading Terminal Market, River Market in Little Rock, and the Boqueria in Barcelona have them), And ideally, a mezzanine too. The kitchen could be used to support pop up restaurant services at night.
River Market, Little Rock.
Note that while North Hall was originally added to the building to add space for vendors, this was during the Depression (if I remember correctly), and there wasn't enough consistent demand for more vendors, so the space was converted to a fire station, and now serves as an arts and event facility and user defined space (e.g., nannies in inclement weather), intermittently programmed.
Note you could also just do it with second floor retail space. Harris Teeter and Whole Foods do mezzanines but don't so much for selling space. A Foodtown supermarket in Brooklyn does ("
Foodtown Transforms Old Theater Into New Store,"
Progressive Grocer).
5. Dig out the basement and put in a new floor for food related businesses, what about a brewpub, a chocolate production facility, cheesemaking, etc., along with more vendors for food, using the revamped Essex Market in New York City as an example. The market in Budapest also has a pretty good basement with a lot of fermentation going on. Pike Place Market has a basement but it's pretty plebian.
Somehow do the entrance as part of the plaza north of North Hall? (Note that I don't know if this is structurally possible. That's why you consult with structural engineers. I have been underneath the building and it seemed possible.)
Entrance to the underground section of Essex Market
6. Also somehow figure out how to
put trash services in the basement (with an elevator to move them to ground level, likely on the North Carolina Avenue side of the building), to remove the dumpsters from the "back alley." This will allow the conversion of the back alley to an arcade.
7. The Rumsey Aquarium across from the market is reaching the end of its useful life and it can be rebuilt, using historically appropriate architecture. I would do a nice red brick architecture building. DC and the rest of the US has plenty of good examples, simple warehouse architecture is just fine.
Miller's Court, Baltimore.
Extend the building underground and up (maybe have to buy a couple houses) to put in an underground auditorium/space (perhaps on the C Street side) to replace but continue the arts functions of North Hall, and put in an underground pool.
Build a 3-4 story mixed use facility that could support food initiatives (more in the programming section below), more food businesses on the outside of the interior facing arcade, and another teaching kitchen at the minimum.
8. The top floor could be a meeting facility, comparable to the great room added to the Old Main Street Station in Richmond, Virginia ("A Tale of Two Terminals: How two railroad depots have become premiere event spaces," Richmond Style Weekly). (It could create the potential for noise conflicts, as it abuts housing on C Street and North Carolina Avenue.)
Event space, Old Main Street Station, Richmond.
Meeting facility revenues as a source of subsidy for the rest of the market. Note the meeting facility income issue is a big one. From a "unique selling proposition" standpoint, the weakness of the food offer in Eastern Market currently means it needs to be strengthened. The best opportunity to do with minimal expense is to make North Hall over into a food serving facility.
But the South Hall vendors I don't think want more competition and the city and CAC members think it's more important to make revenue from facility rental to otherwise support subsidizing operations of the rest of the market.
I say you have to put your mission first. EM is being crushed by Union Market in terms of dynamism. But it has historic architecture and other things going for it. So EM needs to respond by converting North Hall to food. This is a compromise. But at the same time, it means reordering how the Rumsey Aquatic Center is currently organized and it could diminish the current service. Which is why I suggest below a pool could be relocated to the 600 block of C Street SE as part of a complementary building.
9. Get rid of the alley between Eastern Market and Rumsey, and make it an arcade, using the example of the arcade building type and the covered atrium at the Smithsonian Reynolds Center. This would connect Eastern Market and the new Rumsey building, with seating and kiosks, with food shops on the ground floor of the Rumsey building, and maybe some kiosks along side the Market building.
Leadenhall Market, London
Parking, parking, parking: Create a transportation management district. There is a surface lot and an underground lot on the 600 block of Pennsylvania Avenue, as well as a parking facility that is supposed to provide parking to Eastern Market in the 700 Pennsylvania Avenue SE building. These spaces are minimally used on weekends and in the evenings. There are also above and underground parking spaces on the 300 block.
1. Create a transportation management district. It should support sustainable modes (biking, walking, transit improvements, bike sharing, and scooter sharing and management) as well as motor vehicle parking. DC created pilot "performance parking districts" 10+ years ago, and one includes parts of Capitol Hill. But they weren't particularly well structured or systematic in processes for recommending and implementing improvements.
2. Develop a shared parking scenario with valet stations and electric shuttle service that could also support the Barracks Row commercial district and other parts of the area, with valet stations throughout the district (I saw this in the North Park district of San Diego many years ago) and electric vehicle shuttles to move people around the TMD, from house to destination and back, for people driving to leave their car in one place, or because of the distances they don't want to walk, etc.
Since June, the SW Waterfront BID has offered exactly this service, using the firm Circuit ("Ride Southwest’s New EV Transit Vehicles: Southwest MID Lauches Rideshare Transit System with Free Rides, Events," Hill Rag), which operates in 30 markets across the country. No reason not to extend a similar service to Capitol Hill. DC calls it a MID, a Mobility Innovation District. FWIW, I've been writing about it as an element of the transit network since 2016 ("Intra-neighborhood (tertiary) transit revisited because of new San Diego service").
Circuit shuttle operating in SW DC. I prefer a branded vehicle.
Potentially there are sponsorship opportunities to help pay for it,
but DC doesn't have that many organizations with the money and interest to do so..
3. DC really screwed up by putting bike lanes on Pennsylvania Avenue here. I would have made parking on the median sides of the boulevard on Pennsylvania Avenue, at least on weekends, to support Eastern Market. Not sure how far you could take this along the Avenue, and if the US Capitol Police would have an objection.
But it would "solve" the perception that there isn't enough parking, or parking close by. And it would destroy once and for all the complaints of all the vendors that parking is their number one business problem.
Sunday church double parking on the median, 3900 block of New Hampshire Avenue NW
600 block of Pennsylvania Avenue SE
4. Consider creating angle parking on North Carolina Avenue SE and South Carolina Avenue SE to support Eastern Market and the area, and to road diet those streets.
5. As part of the shuttle program, patrons in some defined geographic area of Capitol Hill could get rides from and to home, carrying their purchases from Eastern Market and other places. As a result there should be limited shuttle service Monday through Friday during the day and evenings, separate from the weekend service.
6. A TMD should be extended to the 200 block of Pennsylvania Avenue SE. There is an underground parking lot on the 200 block which is not open on weekends, and surface parking too. Again, create a shared parking scenario. There are a lot of complaints about "not enough parking." But in this place (and others in the city), it's more about there being parking but it being inaccessible.
Outdoor transit information display at Gallery Place
DC did a pilot of this, but never really expanded it. Arlington and Montgomery Counties have done and still do this. And I think MTA? at the Takoma Langley Crossroads Transit Center which is all bus now, but will add light rail. Maybe they use the MoCo application there.
My thing is to make it an ad network also, which can support local nonprofits and local news media too.
9. Treat intersections as a network and create a network of pedestrian scramble intersections along Pennsylvania Avenue.
10. (This is also a programming recommendation.) Extend the special pavement of the 200 block of 7th Street to around Eastern Market Plaza (both sides) to knit this area together: Eastern Market; Eastern Market Metrorail Station; Southeast Library; Metro Plazas east and west.
11. Package valet and delivery services should be developed as an element of transportation demand management.
12. Freight delivery management planning. For the businesses on the major streets and Eastern Market. I'm a fan of time shifted delivery to reduce impact on narrow and congested streets.
A future expansion phase for "the building complex" to the opposite side of the 600 block of C Street. Could build a building on top of the parking lot behind 600 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. It could include more parking (parking, parking) underground, a culinary training facility, and other programs.
601 C Street SE (rear of 600 Pennsylvania Avenue SE)
Programming: From Eastern Market to the Eastern Market District | Position as a key anchor in the regional food system | From static to dynamic. So many issues. All the places and many of the businesses that Eastern Market competes with are so much more active and professional when it comes to customer marketing.
One of the problems is that there has been bifurcated management of different elements of "Eastern Market." But now many of these elements have been consolidated into EM. Regardless, the city management structure means that EM lacks the capacity and vision to do it and manage it. It's like, how good do you think DC government as an entity is at marketing now?
But Eastern Market can become once again an anchor in the community food system, recognizing that DC is not an agricultural city per se, but its strength as a market for consumption and proximity to regional food production gives it an opportunity to be more prominent. One element is what USDA calls
community food hubs. Another is how food is leveraged as a means of local revitalization. DC is a big (enough) city, so how it does this is different from rural communities, but given how much money is spent on fresh and prepared meals, it's a huge element of the local economy, and can be leveraged to drive more local spending.
Edible City is an "old" book but provocative about food policy and opportunities in Toronto.
WRT programming, urban design, and activation, the weekend markets are seen as the "front porch" or entry/gateway to the Eastern Market district. This idea needs to be embraced for the streets and spaces and shops leading to and around the market.
Eastern Market building/overall
1. Extend hours. EM closes at 7 pm, and on Mondays. Change this for the building and area by doing daypart planning. That means they miss out on the dinner and later evening daypart. The market could be open later, but of course, not all the businesses would need to be open that late, especially the ones that sell fresh foods.
2. Allow the sales of alcohol. Right now places can't sell it. If you want to add more prepared food outlets, and restaurant type operations this has to change. Across the street on Independence Avenue SE is Hayden's, an independent liquor store. Could it be incorporated into the new Market district? The cheese shop could sell wine. Many markets have specialty liquor stores.
3. Develop a premier food and retail business development/entrepreneurship program to identify and train potential business operators, to help them develop robust concepts, and to link them with space, financing and vendor support. Complement this with business development services for existing businesses, and recruitment of existing businesses. I would open this to anybody, whether or not they aim to open businesses in the Eastern Market district, Capitol Hill, or DC. (I suggested something like this to the DC Main Street program in 2003, but it was too ambitious for them to understand.)
The aim of course is to help businesses develop and be successful and to locate them in the Eastern Market district.
That includes improving the merchandising abilities of the existing vendors. For example, Bower's Fancy Dairy could have a prepared food counter featuring great cheese-based dishes, from grilled cheese to macaroni and cheese, and at night fondue. Canales Deli has a restaurant across the street,
Tortilla Cafe, with great dishes, it's a shame there wasn't room for it in the Market, etc.
4. Programming businesses for the new Eastern Market basement annex. You can just add more small shops focused on consumption, or you can focus on joining together food production and consumption. The idea is to build the experience element, creating food products before your eyes, not just getting a plate of food delivered to your table.
This would be a defining element of a Renewed Eastern Market. (I think that was one of the positioning/marketing lines I came up with. Along with the idea of having a lot of this launch on the 150th anniversary.) Although there is a distillery and a brewpub in the larger Union Market district.
For example a brew pub, which you need a few thousand square feet for equipment (Denizens in Silver Spring as an example). A coffee shop with roastery, like Vigilante Coffee in Hyattsville. Get the Dairy Barn ice cream shop of the University of Maryland School of Agriculture to open a branch. Or a creamery making great ice cream on site, or the nitrogen ice cream operation SubZero, which makes ice cream treats on demand ("
Science, plus ice cream, equals performance art,"
Sarasota Herald-Tribune).
Do a food fermentation operation. Chocolate production. Cheese production in association with Bower's Dairy, etc.
King's Roost in Los Angeles grinds specialty grains and has classes. On site baking operations. Bagels? Artisan doughnuts. If it were a Hispanic serving area--it isn't--fresh tortillas. A vegan bakery? Etc.
5. Depending on if you can go down another basement level, you could create a certified food production kitchen to also support these businesses and other small food business development as an element of food entrepreneurship and microenterprise development. It could support catering too.
There are other such facilities in the area. So it wouldn't be as unique. But it's an important element of the business development function of markets.
6.
Leverage the food production kitchen to support nonprofit community food and business development initiatives, in a manner that the for profit food halls and operations don't. La Cocina is an operation in San Francisco that works with immigrants to develop food businesses, but there are many such best practice examples of food production operations across the country. In Salt Lake you have
RISE Culinary Institute and there used to be the Flourish Bakery ("
Salt Lake City’s Flourish Bakery changes lives of recovering addicts, but it needs a new home,"
Salt Lake Tribune), which train people in food production.
Together We Bake is a similar operation in Alexandria, Virginia. Why not Eastern Market? (There are for profit food production set ups elsewhere in DC. But the don't support civic initiatives.)
The
Washington Post just had an
article on the Mount Pleasant based organization
ReDelicious, which does interesting stuff. They should be doing it at EM.
7. Create an array of programming organized across food and arts and dayparts. Some of the programming should be consumption oriented. Some food mission. Some both. For example a night market one or more days per month in the summer.
I had the idea to do a summer BBQ weekend -- sure they do this Downtown on Pennsylvania Avenue, but focus less on competition and more on doing, from meat to vegetables to pizza. Get Steve Raichlen and others.
And for the arts too. I forgot til just now that I wanted our project to consult/do some case studies with other groups. In the arts, the foremost one was the
Portland Saturday Market, which is arts only. I think they definitely do a better job on marketing.
The arts vendors have all the same issues as the food side, in that when outside arts sales started, there were few competitors. Now there are tons, plus holiday markets, etc.
Use the daypart model, account for seasons, city-wide events that you may or may not be able to leverage, and organize it by program area -- food, arts, etc. This should be indoors and outdoors.
8. WRT event planning, create and distribute an annual calendar of events. Do marketing -- harder as local media goes out of business, etc. Work with Hill Rag community newspaper, websites, develop an active social media program, etc.
If Takoma Park Maryland can do an annual events calendar, so can Eastern Market and Capitol Hill
9. Demonstration kitchens and broader food programming. A smaller one could be in North Hall, a larger one in the Rumsey Building. This could be done with DC agencies too, like the Office on Aging, WIC and other food support programs, to provide healthy cooking training. You could also offer teaching opportunities to DC school kids through these facilities, like they do in Little Rock and Barcelona. Many grocery chains do this, of course aimed at well off patrons, like Fairway in New York City and Harmon's in Greater Salt Lake.
a nonprofit community cooking school which teaches more than 7,000 Bay Area residents every year how to shop, cook and enjoy good food. 18 Reasons hosts classes and dinners at the 18th Street classroom every night of the week, and runs four, free multi-week cooking and nutrition education programs throughout the Bay Area: Cooking Matters, Planned & Prepped, Nourishing Pregnancy, and Food as Medicine.
On Capitol Hill, just a few blocks from Eastern Market, one household plants basil and other goodies in their treebox.Baking and canning classes. How to grow mushrooms or microgreens, etc. For example, I haven't had good luck making bagels (Salt Lake is a bagel desert). I'd happily take a class.
Composting and food waste.
What 18 Reasons does is a model for how to build a community focused food programming initiative, centered within the Market but with city-wide serving programs. The Stop in Toronto also is a model for community programming around food.
For example, in Salt Lake there is a pre-Thanksgiving Vegan Dinner. Some of the libraries in Salt Lake County have cookbook clubs, where people meet each month, cook items from a particular cookbook, and share the results.
I've always thought it would be cool to do this with the weekly recipes from the Washington Post and the New York Times, and food magazines.
Projects like the Tomato Independence Project in Boise ("Foodies and Farmers Wage War Against Tasteless Tomatoes," Boise Weekly, Building a Better Tomato," Edible Idaho) planting fruit trees ("How Angelenos are battling food insecurity by using hyperlocal apps to share their bounty," Los Angeles Times) and other Edible Landscape initiatives would improve community quality of life and could be launched and supported by Eastern Market.
The UK's Real Bread Campaign focuses on shifting people from manufactured mass production bread to artisan bread, even the creation of micro-bakeries and "community supported bakeries" ("Real Bread Campaign gears up for 10th annual Sourdough September," Bakery&Snacks). Why not have such a movement in the Chesapeake region, and a community-supported bakery in Eastern Market's "new (proposed) basement annex."
During the pandemic, some bakeries gave away (or sold) sourdough starter to new adherents ("A chef gave away 500 sourdough starters and built a community around bread, pancakes and doughnuts," Washington Post).
Another food bank in Toronto, Food Share, has a salad bar program operating in a number of city high schools.
And the book Feed the Resistance: Recipes + Ideas for Getting Involved, which links food and activism.
The Project Open mixed use building in Salt Lake City grows herbs in its front spaces, which are free to pick.
Children and family programming too. ChopChop Family is a magazine for families about food, cooking and nutrition. Along the lines of broader community programming, the Flint (Michigan) Cultural Center Academy's food programs are a great model (Flint Kids East Fresh Foods, Flint Kids Cook, "COOKING CLASSES IN MICHIGAN ARE CHANGING KIDS LIVES," ChopChop Family).
The Monocle had a story in June 2019 about a children focused community food center in Tokyo, but I can't find my hard copy. It's called Kageoka no Ie (House in Kageoka).
Author talks and demonstrations.
Note the demonstration kitchens should be outfitted with cable television quality camera and production equipment to be able to produce television shows.
10. Dietary counseling Safeway and Giant Supermarkets as part of their pharmacy offer nutrition programming and counseling. Maybe in conjunction with DOH this could be done for lower income patrons for counseling, and everyone wrt programming.
11. Membership program. Could provide discounts on fee-based programs, access to a cookbook, food, and gardening library. Cost could be based on income, and there should be an equity and outreach program to ensure the demographics of participants reflect DC's demographics.
Eastern Market Metrorail Station and Plaza
12.
Program and police Eastern Market Metro Plaza/Metrorail Station. It's the gateway to Eastern Market and Capitol Hill so verve and disorder matters ("
Eastern Market Comittee Asks Council for Public Safety Improvements,"
Hill Rag). I know Barracks Row Main Street and the Capitol Hill BID are supposed to be doing this but obviously they're inadequate.
Include movable tables and chairs, secure bicycle parking and other elements.
13. Build a visitor center in the mezzanine section of the Eastern Market Metrorail Station. It can also serve as a Metrorail transit office. Liverpool has some nice examples. I don't like the London ones so much. As mentioned, the visitor center in Pioneer Courthouse Square. Tokyo Metro has good ones. NYC Subway introduced some recently. Etc. Should be funded in large part by Destination DC.
Liverpool
14. One way to program the South/West Plaza is to connect the library more to the Plaza. We suggested this almost 20 years ago in that PPS workshop, building a crosswalk from the library to the Plaza. Incorporating the example of Bryant Park Reading Room. One problem with author talks though is the outside noise. Buses are loud. (Note that the North/East Plaza has a playground and is residential, not business district oriented. It needs to be monitored and maintained but is probably fine as is.)
Bryant Park, Flickr photo by John.
Maybe bringing back the idea of how the now defunct Newseum used to post front pages from around the country on their facade. A similar presentation could be done on the west and south sides of the Metrorail escalator overhang. Maybe with the national papers, and the local and regional papers (DC, Baltimore, Richmond, etc.) including community papers.
Incorporate book and media related art, including projections? Inside the station too.
15. Architectural/public art lighting of the Metrorail station canopy. Bill FitzGibbons of San Antonio has done some interesting work with lighting. Like El Centro Plaza for the VIA transit system.
Outdoors
16. (As discussed above) Extend the special pavement of the 200 block of 7th Street to around Eastern Market Plaza (both sides) to knit this area together: Eastern Market; Eastern Market Metrorail Station; Southeast Library; Metro Plazas north/east and south/west.
Looking south, 400 block of 7th Street SE. Southeast Library on the left, Eastern Market Metro Plaza on the right.
17. 200 (and 300) block of 7th Street: keep it closed on weekends but extend this: make it a two block pedestrian mall all the time. The South Hall vendors bitch and moan that the street is closed on the weekends. But that is a huge attractor. It's a competitive advantage that they fail to realize and appreciate. Add some sort of package service served from C Street SE and North Carolina Avenue. Provide the shuttle. Make it easy for people to get to the market, but not have to park right there.
200 block of 7th Street SE on weekends with Eastern Market in the background
But if all the measures with regard to parking in the Transportation Management District are implemented, you don't need to drive and park on 7th Street, except for business delivery (this can be accommodated in the morning, when the street can be opened to vehicles). So make it a two block pedestrian district, really the only one in DC. That would be a huge differentiator vis a vis Eastern Market's competition.
The thing is to be successful, it has to be super duper programmed. I've written a lot about this.
And C Street SE can still provide vehicular access in emergencies..
But alongside programming, there will need to be massive efforts ongoing to ensure all the storefront spaces are full and the stores and restaurants super successful.
Hat tip to Suzanne for reminding me.
Note that St. Lawrence Market in Toronto, and to some extent the area around Lancaster Market (Pennsylvania) are pedestrianized.
18. String lights across the 200 and 300 blocks of 7th Street to create a visual gateway from the Eastern Market Metrorail station to Easatern Market. Larimer Square is an example, so is St. Catherine Street in the summer in Montreal. London business districts do this a lot, like Oxford Street, where the style of the overhang changes frequently.
Montreal
Relatedly, make sure all the tree boxes have electrical connections to facilitate simplified electricity use for festivals, etc.
19. Add quality and creative street furniture, picnic tables and movable tables and chairs around the Market building and on the now pedestrianized 200/300 blocks of 7th Street, on days of the week when there isn't outside vending. Instead of crappy old picnic tables, use verve.
Adult swings at The Porch
20. The weekend arts vendors should have access to a package delivery service. Make it easy for patrons to buy stuff but not have to lug it around.
21. 300 block of 7th Street: Use the Saturday daypart for small festivals. On Saturday it's managed by Eastern Market, on Sundays by an independent vendor. Special events draw new and repeat patrons. They add dynamism.
22. 700 block of C Street SE and spaces abutting the 700 Pennsylvania Avenue SE building. This space is managed by the building owner, but there should be integrated management. It's partially closed on weekends. On Saturdays it should be integrated into festival programming on the 300 block of 7th Street. It's already programmed by the Sunday master vendor.
23.
A weekly night market? They are big in New York City and other places ("
Here are all the NYC night markets to indulge in this summer,"
TimeOut New York). It provides another opportunity to feature vendors who might not be in the district already. At the same time, do planning development so existing businesses benefit just as much. Again, dynamism.
There is a Tuesday late afternoon/early evening market outside under the EM shed, at least there was. I don't know how successful it is.
24. "Dining in the street." On some Friday nights in the spring and fall, like in Larimer Square in Denver. Dynamism...
Dining al Fresco in Larimer Square, Denver
The new Rumsey building
25. The Rumsey building non-sales spaces should be programmed around food. For example, maybe FreshFarm Markets could have an office there (even though they are a competitor), the DC Food Policy Council could have an office. Maybe the food programs of the DC Office of Health could have its food programs housed there like WIC and SNAP. There could be exhibit space, an art collection around food related art, food related book library, etc. Meeting rooms that are also usable by the public.
26. Rumsey Underground: Arts programming. An arts plan needs to be developed, if the arts use is decided to be maintained. For example, an auditorium can be built underground like the Salt Lake Central Library, and it could be used for performances. The top floor meeting space too. But it would have to be programmed. Maybe there can be a resident theater company, etc. This would retain the arts use currently provided by North Hall. Could there be space for resident artists in the above ground building? Etc.
27. Rumsey Underground: Pool. It could be built underground too. But it might be difficult. I'd put it in a building as part of the program for a building on the parking lot at 601 C Street SE. But anyway instead of getting rid of this use, keep it, just place it somewhere different. But incorporate public art tile elements into the pool (although this could interfere with competitive swimming requirements).
700 Pennsylvania Avenue/700 C Street SE Buildings
28. Try to incorporate food related businesses. There's a Trader Joe's already which draws a lot of patronage. There was an ice creamery in the C Street building. It closed due to business shenanigans. I don't know if the company that took it over reopened the business.
29. To support the arts vendors, develop an arts cooperative retail space that is a bricks and mortar business. Low rent. Operated by the vendors who show their work. It would absorb unused space too, a benefit to the building owner and the streetscape.
Other: Create the Capitol Hill Destination Development, Management, and Marketing Plan, including a branding and identity study for Capitol Hill. Our proposal didn't have enough money to do this. I wanted
a destination development person on our team, but the other lead was enamored with a kind of arcane study technique that he wanted to do, so I couldn't reprogram that money. But I aimed to get a supplemental appropriation to move this necessary element forward.
Around that time, the Capitol Hill BID started doing a branding study, which I saw as a congruent effort. I haven't ever tried to get a copy, if they've even made it public, which I don't think they have.
Civic engagement. Knowing how the citizenry is, neighborhood and community interest in Eastern Market, and how in the past various stakeholder groups have sabotaged necessary change, I planned for a seriously robust civic engagement process too.
Conclusion. I don't have polite language to describe what happened to me over this, as well as the loss of the opportunity to do an amazing program. And to get paid and have a job as an old guy. I will always be angry about it.
Then again, DC lacks the vision to be able to do stuff like this anyway, based on my experience of all my previously ignored blog entry recommendations about policy and practice.
Don't ever make enemies with a guy with an unlimited ink budget!
ReplyDeleteI can understand the anger -- certainly been screwed over myself for a few jobs, and nothing is worse that this level of backstabbing and deceit. Burns you for years.
"Rebuilding". "Transformation". IN all honestly people are just happy with the status quo. Again "Who moved my cheese" is a great parable, and the point that you've got to always be thinking of the next cheese is usually lost.
What I'm taking from this story is the endless silos we build in community development, and that initiations and accretions around those silos that make transformation hard.
And nobody pushes back because of the political disfunction.
And that's local government. I remember reading about a n ew mayor in Virginia that all you need to be a mayor is zoning and water/sewer.
Not sure if you saw this but similar:
https://dcist.com/story/23/11/15/torpedo-factory-arts-center-new-management-alexandria-mayor-city-council/
Certainly one of the things most useful is highlighting how things could be better.
Saw this is stockholm last winter:
https://en.ostermalmshallen.se
You had a tagline in your election post about "governance" matters in blue states; I violently disagree. That's the entire issue -- in deep blue cities governance does NOT matter and as long as you have decent economic growth nobody cares to stand out.
My basic rule of thumb in American life is that if you're not increasing, making things nicer and on a steady state you're actually in decline. That's my takeaway from the experience of Cleveland and the rust belt.
Have been to Torpoedo a few times recently and it has certainly changed, and more studios are open with artists working in them. More of a mix of works at different price points. The place needed a purge.
ReplyDeleteMore later. But yes, the inclination is for maintenance not change. I was talking about this with my neighbor. He was surprised i could talk about continuous process improvement, kaizen etc. My problem is that after moving to DC in 1987, I read Reinventing Government and _believed_ that we could continually improve our community(ies). That apply re-engineering to government (really community improvement) was what people wanted to do.
ReplyDeleteSuch a small percentage thinks about the stuff I do. But then, Oklahoma City....
(I got in an "argument" on Reddit with a guy who thinks French historic preservation policy will somehow save development opportunities in places like Richmond. I said good luck changing the National Historic Preservation Act and the Secretary of Interior Guidelines by citing France, that current law favors development but he disagreed. So I can be curmudgeonly.)
Stockholm space looks cool, will explore.
Your take on "governance" in blue states is probably more correct.
Eg early on out here, the County Mayor put out a post about how great they were ranked financially. And I wrote her saying it's easy to have good finances when you're growing (cf my post on Flint or even Pontiac).
Lots of "recent" studies on TP. I have been watching. Will respond in more depth (ten fingers versus one).
ReplyDeleteOn the park board is a woman in her 30s who is similar in outlook. I love working with her and we have 7 years to do amazing transformation. It will be fun, but is tough because the board majority has been focused on being passive versus active.
ReplyDelete"Fortunately" there are so many capital needs we are forced to act. But she and I and another amazing younger woman who is a lawyer are a great team.
I forgot to put down my thoughts about the Torpedo Factory.
ReplyDeleteThey have all the same issues that EM does. If you think of the vendors, especially inside, but also the arts vendors outside, there is a form of regulatory capture.
The community isn't organized so much, and they have vested interest, so they are the most organized and "control" at least loosely, the narrative.
It's why a true independent nonprofit hasn't been able to be given the management of the market, even though it would be better than the current set up.
(Note a fake nonprofit run by a real estate firm did run the market for a few years in the early 2000s. As far as management they were okay, but they had no civic inclination or interest.)
So the artists controlled the TF even though it is city owned and a key element of the waterfront and the city's cultural program.
Over time it became pretty static, and as Alexandria's tourism profile has increased it hasn't kept pace.
The city wants verve, the artists just want to keep their spaces, at low rents.
But the city needs ROI in terms of serving the tourist market, as well as meeting broader goals and objectives as part of its cultural programming.
It's fair to say that TF hasn't been doing that. (Note I haven't visited in 4 years, so maybe everything's changed.)
But that's very contentious, especially because artists can organize easier than governments, and the kind of language an evaluative study uses, like ROI, Economic Development objectives, etc., aren't likely to be as hot button as "you're going to kick us out."
I agree with the city, just like I think about EM, that things need to change to keep TF relevant and a contributing asset to Alexandria's waterfront, tourism development, and cultural plan and programming.
E.g., I'd say the GoggleWorks in Reading, PA might be a better model, mixing arts organizations, studios, and arts programming.
To avoid complete displacement, maybe it's possible to identify and develop a supplemental building to offer studios to artists, but not at TF, so that space at TF can be reprogrammed.
My only knowledge abouttheir process comes from the Post, e.g.,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2021/11/30/torpedo-factory-alexandria-artists-restaurant/
although it was an issue back when we were responding to the RFP. I can't remember if I referenced it.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/this-torpedo-factory-has-thrived-as-an-artists-colony-for-42-years-now-everything-might-change/2016/03/24/2d435a2a-ef75-11e5-a61f-e9c95c06edca_story.html
One of the groups I wanted to provide some consulting to our project for Eastern Market on this dimension was the Portland Saturday Market, which is exclusively arts.
They are way better at marketing than EM.
The problem with arts and crafts and EM is that for decades it was first, and often the only, or one of a handful. Now every place is doing it.
And that affects TF too.
Another activity.
ReplyDeleteCookbook Swap at Ivy and Coney
Going to a Thanksgiving potluck can be stressful, especially if you haven’t decided what you’re bringing. Need some inspiration? Head to Ivy and Coney, where local online magazine Recommend If You Like is hosting a pre-Thanksgiving cookbook swap. Bring that cookbook “written” by a reality show star that your great aunt left under the tree last year, and trade it for something you might actually use in the next day or so. (Bonus: Italian Beef is $5 on Tuesday!)
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/cookbook-swap-tickets-743697628627
WRT my point about governments doing things and charlie's counter that mostly it's not about governance but growth independently of the local government.
ReplyDeleteStory about how Las Vegas is leveraging sports as another way to activate the city, keep adding attractions.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2023/11/17/f1-las-vegas-pro-sports/
From Sin City to America’s sports capital
Las Vegas is transforming itself again. What do the glitz of Formula One and the Super Bowl mean for the city’s future – and for the workers building it?
====
There's a great sentence about LV being the city that always says yes.
It’s construction noise, but it’s also the latest last gasp of a city that always says yes, the sound of Las Vegas, after a century of wagers, going all-in on perhaps its biggest gamble ever.
It's related to my point about transformational projects action planning including a willingness to take advantage of opportunities that present themselves, that work within the framework of a creative master plan, about taking advantage of serendipity.
https://shop.open-city.org.uk/products/london-feeds-itself-2nd-edition
ReplyDeletehttps://www.inquirer.com/news/pennsylvania/phoenixville-residents-business-owners-inside-out-outdoor-drinking-20231125.html
ReplyDeletePhoenixville has turned into a destination, but some locals don’t like what it’s become
The borough’s Inside Out drinking and dining series has left some locals frustrated over the crowds
=====
Tensions within local community between residents and visitor interests over street closures, etc.
Similar to the dislike by EM vendors of closing 7th Street.
PXV Inside Out closes Bridge Street, the city's main traditional commercial district ("Downtown"), from Friday afternoon to Monday morning, for street life including music, dining (like Larimer Square in Denver, but a lesser focus) and drinking.
https://www.phoenixvillefirst.org/pxv-inside-out
It also reminds me of some opposition by businesses on St. Catherine Street in Montreal where the street is closed to cars for a couple months every summer.
True, not every business benefits from such treatments. To me, that means taking planning steps to assist those businesses where street closures are a hindrance, and to help the businesses that can better benefit to realize those opportunities.
Nothing really new in this article. About the rise of interest in purchasing arts and crafts artisanal produced items in the UK.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2023/dec/03/people-want-something-thats-not-on-amazon-the-rise-of-the-uk-craft-fair
I can't believe I forgot to mention a key security element as part of transportation. Retractable bollards at key entry points to the pedestrianized area.
ReplyDeleteSomeone tried to run into the Rose Parade, but was stopped by barriers.
https://www.ocregister.com/2024/01/02/driver-who-rammed-rose-parade-barriers-had-previous-arrests-mental-health-issues-officials-say/
I had argued for that for years, because of my experience with farmers markets.
Breadlab, a research station, bakery and school in Burlington, Washington, makes 100% whole-grain products accessible.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.seattletimes.com/sponsored/locally-developed-grains-make-bread-thats-down-to-earth
https://progressivegrocer.com/wellness-education-programs-give-grocers-competitive-edge
ReplyDeleteFood insecurity programming
ReplyDeleteWe can’t talk about crime in D.C. without talking about hunger
https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2024/01/10/hunger-crime-dc-families/
12 Retail Trends A-Trending - Progressive Grocer
ReplyDeletehttps://progressivegrocer.com/12-retail-trends-trending
1. Loyalty: What have you done for me lately? That’s what your shoppers are thinking about outdated circulars, apps and promotions that don’t really solve their problems. As Giant Food’s loyalty guru, Ryan Draude, suggested during a recent Progressive Grocer webinar, perhaps it’s time to design loyalty programs like those of airlines and hotels. Give shoppers a reason to come to the store more often to rack up those points!
9. Social commerce: Tik Tok-viral recipes will keep triggering out-of-stocks, so now’s the time to invest in some better forecasting solutions to predict demand based on social media and other trends.
10. Storytelling: Speaking of Tik Tok, there's a few vids going viral in which Tik Tokers are putting grocery retailers on blast over high prices. Grocers that want to retain their shoppers and acquire new ones need to do a better job of telling their stories, whether in-store or online. The store is the heart and soul of the community. It's way past time to shout it from the rooftops.
12. Small brands: Now that supply chains are mostly back to “normal,” smaller brands have an opportunity to win space on the shelf again — as long as they’re value-priced, of course.
We'll extend point 12 to regional and local producers, independent businesses.
A new Dominican-owned coffee roaster in Brewerytown is redefining Latinos’ role in the business
ReplyDeleteCafé Don Pedro will focus on eliminating as many middlemen as possible between coffee growers and consumers.
https://www.inquirer.com/news/philadelphia/cafe-don-pedro-brewerytown-opening-20240111.html
Café Don Pedro will source and roast its own coffee for wholesale and retail, focusing on eliminating as many middlemen as possible between coffee growers and consumers in the U.S. Their first batch of beans comes directly from a small group of Guatemalan women who took over their area’s coffee production after so many men left the country for the U.S. These are the kinds of people Rodriguez wants to work with, as opposed to the “middlemen” — processors and exporters.
“We noticed that a lot of Latinos produce coffee. They grow it, they pick it up, they wash it, and they put it in big sacks … and then we, in the United States, as consumers, we drink it every day. But we’re not in the middle,” Rodriguez said.
https://www.supermarketnews.com/marketing/meijer-highlights-black-owned-brands-small-businesses
ReplyDeleteMeijer highlights Black-owned brands, small businesses
2/1/24
Meijer is touting its Black-owned brands and small businesses during Black History Month. Since formalizing a program that targets diverse suppliers in 2021, the Meijer Grow Academy, Meijer said it has grown its selection of Black-owned brands by nearly 35%.
When a certified diverse supplier joins Meijer, the company’s supplier inclusion division offers them onboarding, training and networking events that demonstrate both how to do business with Meijer, and also how to grow within the retailer’s six state footprint and three store formats.
The program also presents foundational material on brand strategy, marketing, product packaging, operating processes, and distribution capabilities, among other topics. Suppliers also receive one-on-one coaching from Meijer buyers and other business teams to help them strengthen their business and reach more customers.
Although customers can find Black-owned brands on Meijer shelves all year, a curated product offering will be prominently displayed in all Meijer supercenters in celebration of Black History Month throughout February. The collection spans various product categories, including grocery, health and beauty, and home.
Washington City Paper
ReplyDeleteChinese New Year Dinner
Sunday 2/4/2024
6:30 p.m. at La Cosecha, 1280 4th St. NE
Dan Dan Boy hosts a Chinese street market to celebrate the Lunar New Year. Meals offered include homemade beef soup, as well as snacks including dumplings, Tangyuan in Mahjong shapes, sticky rice balls, and Tanghulu. There will also be a two-part cooking class where you can learn to make noodles from scratch.
Artist cooperative closes in St. George, Utah, replaced by a traditional retail store selling art.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.stgeorgeutah.com/news/archive/2024/01/30/jsb-a-new-store-in-st-george-rises-from-the-ashes-of-mofaco-keeping-the-spirit-alive-for-local-artists
https://greenerpartners.org/what-we-do/education/
ReplyDeletePhiladelphia, program includes nutrition classes for kids
School-based program outcomes:
Greener Partners’ research shows that when students have access to fresh produce, plus cooking and gardening education, they eat more vegetables:
Kids who participate in Farm Explorer programs show a 24% increased willingness to eat fruits and vegetables.
“We learned about eating healthy and that vegetables can actually taste really good.” 5th grader at Ziegler Elementary in Philadelphia
“Your food demonstrations have been life changing for my daughter. She always refused to try most foods, and now she is trying everything you can imagine” Parent of a Farm Explorer participant
Community-based program outcomes:
When Norristown residents have access to fresh food, plus cooking and gardening education, they eat more produce:
There was a 20% increase in consumption of fruits and vegetables after 5 months of our Norristown Healthy Food Project (NHFP)
Norristown Families want Support
68% experience food insecurity but want healthy food
85% said our recipe samples and education improved their kitchen confidence
92% said they would join in our program again
Arts Council designs new venue for CREATE PC
ReplyDeletehttps://www.parkrecord.com/entertainment/arts-council-designs-new-venue-for-create-pc
CREATE PC has a new home, and the public is invited to celebrate.
The program, facilitated by the Arts Council of Park City and Summit County, provides artist studio space and gallery exhibition and sale opportunities for local artists.
CREATE PC’s space measures close to 5,000 square feet and includes two floors, according to Scudder.
“The first floor is more of a creative marketplace and gallery, where people will be able to come view works created by local artists and buy the work to support these artists,” she said. “We have room to house the work of 32 local artists and their works that include paintings, photography, jewelry and ceramics — a beautiful display of Summit County Talents.”
The upstairs floor will feature CREATE PC’s Artists-in-Resident.
The Artists-in-Resident program features 10 Summit County artists (see accompanying list) who rent studio space from the Arts Council, Scudder said.
“Each artist has a 10-foot by 10-foot creative space that they can make their own, and some have moved in their easels and walls,” she said. “They have 24-hour access to their space, and we’ve parceled the open layout.”
... The Arts Council signed a three-year lease, which is the longest brick-and-mortar program in its history, Scudder said.
“It’s not completely permanent, but we signed the lease with a redevelopment rider,” she said. “The complex is going to be redeveloped in about three years, so, we’ll be open for that time, unless the building ends up expediting their rebuilding process.”
Inside Two Locals, Philadelphia’s first Black-owned brewery
ReplyDeletehttps://www.inquirer.com/food/restaurants/philadelphia-black-owned-brewery-two-locals-20240129.html
Institutional composting at West Side Market in Cleveland.
ReplyDeletehttps://thelandcle.org/stories/west-side-market-composting-pilot-program-reduces-food-waste-landfill-dumping/
https://www.wkyc.com/article/money/economy/mission-possible/mission-possible-black-frog-brewery-cleveland/95-7ecef879-9753-4ea4-be62-4902abc7e30b
ReplyDeletehttps://www.axios.com/local/washington-dc/2024/02/26/tipsy-scoop-alcoholic-ice-cream-bar-dc
ReplyDeletehttps://www.cleveland.com/entertainment/2024/02/west-side-market-prepares-for-management-transition.html
ReplyDeleteWeavers Way Supports Vendor Diversity in Philadelphia
ReplyDeleteCo-op's annual program highlights local makers and artisans of color
https://progressivegrocer.com/weavers-way-supports-vendor-diversity-philadelphia
10/9/23
As it observes National Co-op Month and its own 50th anniversary, Weavers Way Co-op is marking the fourth anniversary of its successful Vendor Diversity Program, which highlights local makers and artisans of color in the greater Philadelphia area. The program offers selected vendors assistance and support to bring their products to market. Beyond offering shelf space, it aids entrepreneurs in such areas as packaging, logistics, production scaling and operations optimization to achieve commercial-level capacities.
Over the years, the initiative has welcomed talented local entrepreneurs to its ranks, including Adelie Coffee, Aaji’s, Alicia’s Cream Cheese Cupcakes & Pumpkin Pies, Amira’s Vegan Muffins, Càphê Roasters, Hank’s Cinnamon Buns, Luminous Intentions, Mt. Airy Candle Co., Reveal Avocado Seed Brew, Sequoya and Jaylin’s Gourmet Foods, Puddin’ Guy, Urban Essence Soap and Candles by Vicki.
https://progressivegrocer.com/sprouts-farmers-market-rolling-out-4-store-press-coffee-shops
ReplyDeleteSprouts Farmers Market Rolling Out 4 In-Store Press Coffee Shops
Arizona-based companies expanding partnership after 1-year pilot
11/21/23
Following a successful pilot program, Sprouts Farmers Market is expanding its partnership with Press Coffee to bring additional in-store shops to four of its Phoenix-area stores. The first new location opened Nov. 17, and the rest are slated to open by February 2024.
Each in-store Press Coffee bar will feature a workspace area and full drink menu that includes specialty drip and cold brew coffee, shakers, hot and iced tea, and nitro bold brew. The locations will also offer a selection of regular in-store retail items including whole and ground coffee beans.
https://progressivegrocer.com/exclusive-look-inside-1st-publix-kentucky
ReplyDeleteA Look Inside the 1st Publix in Kentucky
1/10/24
Those unique venues include an expansive foodservice-at-retail and prepared foods area, with an in-the-round layout that evokes a food court. At one station, shoppers can have an associate build them their own custom Mexican-style burritos and bowls, while at another, they can order from a menu of pasta bowls, pizzas and appetizers like stuffed mushrooms and pizza fondue. Publix’s signature chicken tenders and Pub Subs are available too, as are in-house sushi items and ramen bowls from a sushi area.
In addition to other deli staples like a salad bar and hot soup bar, this Publix includes a separate Pours space that serves up espresso drinks, fresh fruit smoothies, acai bowls, craft sodas and on-tap beers from local brewers. There are some inventive varieties, like a Citrus Mule craft soda, avocado smoothie and a Nate’s coffee stout beer, among dozens of other offerings in the drink menu. Customers can take beverages home in growlers, sit at the bar for flights or order a drink to carry while on their shopping jaunt.
There is also space to sit and stay for a spell in this Louisville Publix, both at the Pours area and in a second-level mezzanine that overlooks the entire store. Shoppers in grab-and-go mode can order from the foodservice stations or browse the prepared foods area that features chicken, ribs and other hot foods. “We realize that we’re creating meal solutions and are trying to make it easier for customers. That’s still a number one driver – convenience,” said Brous, adding that this location will include some recipes that are specific to Kentucky, with local flavor profiles.
Other highlights of the new Publix in Louisville include the in-store bakery with a large viewing window, where shoppers can see bakery team members make bread, pastries and the grocer’s signature cakes. The seafood department carries a wide variety of fish, shellfish and other offerings flown in daily and also offers pre-seasoned and ready-to-cook options like bourbon-marinated salmon and mini seafood pies. In the meat department, staff butchers cut meat in house and can engage with shoppers to answer questions about Greenwise organic meats. Over in the produce section near the foodservice area, customers can gaze at the picture-perfect displays and pick out fresh fruits and vegetables as well as value-added kits and packaged items that meet their interest in variety and convenience. The grocery aisles, meanwhile, are stocked with nearly 40,000 items, and the store includes a sizable pharmacy with drive-thru service.
https://progressivegrocer.com/health-care-leaders-back-foodsmart-expand-foodscripts-solution
ReplyDeleteHealth Care Leaders Back Foodsmart to Expand Foodscripts Solution
1/31/24
Foodscripts aims to simplify the process by which doctors refer patients to dietitians and prescribe quality food, just as they would medication, offering a cost-effective way to tackle chronic diseases. With more than 80% of American adults facing such chronic health conditions as diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia and obesity, such a solution is more crucial than ever.
Primary care providers of all sizes can use Foodscripts to help patients improve their food and nutrition security. Foodscripts mimic a pharmacy prescription: Patients get a referral to Foodsmart dietitians and subsidized meals tailored to their specific medical conditions.
Thanks to Foodsmart’s partnerships with health plans, patients usually receive the Foodscripts, access to telenutrition visits, medically tailored food subsidies and the Foodsmart platform, all at $0 out-of-pocket costs. Further, according to the company, its comprehensive approach has enabled 42% of program members experiencing food insecurity become food-secure within six months, with many better able to manage their health conditions.
Outside of dietitian visits, members use the Foodsmart App to stay on track with their healthy-living program, receiving daily support from the food marketplace. Within the marketplace, members can find thousands of healthy recipes, compare prices on groceries, and even have food delivered to their homes through Foodsmart’s integration with Instacart, Grubhub and Walmart. The company also works with numerous local minority and women-owned businesses, as well as food-centric nonprofits such Dion’s Chicago Dream and Eridor Food Service, to name a few. Foodsmart supports more than 2 million members across the United States through partnerships with some of the largest health plans and employers.
https://progressivegrocer.com/save-lot-incorporates-dream-vault-fight-food-insecurity-chicago
ReplyDeleteSave A Lot Incorporates The Dream Vault to Fight Food Insecurity in Chicago
9/23/23
A new Save A Lot store on Chicago’s South Side has become the site of an innovative solution to food insecurity: To mark its third anniversary, nonprofit organization Dion’s Chicago Dream has launched The Dream Vault, a locker-based system to dispense fresh produce to those in need.
The network-enabled bank of lockers is designed to provide 200 households living within a 1-mile radius of the store with fresh fruits and vegetables, at no cost to them. Every week, a recipient can enter a code and pick up a box of produce.
The plan is to launch at least four more Dream Vaults throughout Chicago with other partners by the end of the year. “We’re looking at the next launch to begin around Thanksgiving,” affirms Dawson, adding: “We intend to expand to larger retail chains so that this tool is available across the city, and eventually in every corner of the country. Access to fresh, quality food is a human right, and for us, fighting food insecurity doesn’t stop in Chicago. This is a nationwide crisis, a worldwide crisis. We want to provide as many people as possible with access to healthy food when they need it.”
That may seem an ambitious goal, but over the past three years of its existence, Dion’s Chicago Dream has already provided more than 600,000 pounds of fresh fruits and vegetables to households in need throughout the Chicagoland area through its Dream Fridge and Dream Deliveries programs. For now, however, at least one of the nonprofit’s dreams has become a reality as it pioneers the use of frictionless grocery technology to aid some of the most vulnerable people in our society.
Wellness Education Programs Give Grocers a Competitive Edge
ReplyDelete8/18/23
https://progressivegrocer.com/wellness-education-programs-give-grocers-competitive-edge
Pharmacy Services
Besides medication dispensing and medication management, most pharmacies also provide biometric health screenings and smoking cessation classes. These can be offered alongside other retail health programs or as stand-alone services to inform and improve customer health. Wellness programs tailored to certain themes, such as American Heart Month in February or World No Tobacco Day on May 31, can help make customers intentional about initiating change at a certain time. Ask your pharmacists and pharmacy technicians about what common requests or questions shoppers have about wellness at the pharmacy counter.
Cooking
Programs focused on getting shoppers in the kitchen to create flavorful, original and creative dishes are usually the objective of every cooking experience. Adding extra considerations, such as meals designed for certain budgets, kitchen competencies, stage of life, health needs or time restraints, can get your shoppers even more excited. Coborn’s Kids Cook at Home virtual cooking class series programming even provides a shopping list, recipes and a setup guide for attendees. See whether a cooking class subscription service with meal kits might be a worthwhile endeavor for your customers.
Exercise
Wellness programs that include an exercise component are more effective than focusing solely on eating habits. Consumers can get moving via on-site physical therapists (offered at H-E-B), virtual “Short & Sweat” fitness videos (offered at Hy-Vee), or Kroger’s Welsana wellness program, which provides the ability to log exercise and receive health coaching to improve fitness. If your retailer can’t assemble a formal exercise program but has the store space inside or out for group fitness, develop a set of recurring exercise classes like yoga or Zumba, and market these on a monthly calendar in-store and online.
Nutrition
Registered dietitians (RDs) are your grocery chain’s food and nutrition experts. Currently, around 81% of food retailers employ dietitians: 65% at the corporate level, 21% in-store or virtual, and 12% regionally, per FMI’s 2021 “Report on Retailer Contributions to Health and Well-being.” Dietitians help build customer trust, translate nutrition science into product recommendations, and are well positioned to create and execute successful wellness education programs. For instance, Canadian food retailer Loblaws offers three popular dietitian programs: diabetes, heart health and weight management.
Employee Health
A wellness program that targets associates’ health is not only the right thing to do for your employees, but it can also enhance productivity, decrease absenteeism and lower health care-associated costs. Considerations such as flexible hours for participation, adapting material to be relevant for employees’ lifestyles, offering incentives for involvement and using digital tools to track success are key elements of this type of programming.
Wellness education programs are now offered with various components, including pharmacy services, cooking, exercise, nutrition and employee health. Determine what mix of programming could reach the most customers and with the most impact at your business.
Smorgasburg LA
ReplyDeletehttps://www.latimes.com/food/story/2024-01-18/new-smorgasburg-los-angeles-vendors-for-2024-cambodian-texas-barbecue
One of the region’s top food festivals and culinary incubators just returned from its annual winter break with nearly 60 food vendors — and 10 of them are new. With the 2024 debut last Sunday of Smorgasburg Los Angeles, the L.A. Times 101 Best Restaurants-awarded festival introduced sellers that run the gamut from recognizable names and restaurants to chefs new to L.A.’s food scene.
Chad Phuong, also known as the Cambodian Cowboy, often can be found smoking meats with Cambodian influence via his Long Beach pop-up Battambong BBQ — but now he’ll be a regular presence at Smorgasburg, held each Sunday at the Row DTLA in the Arts District. His Texas-style barbecue trays come piled with brisket, tri-tip, chicken or pulled pork, while Cambodian num pang sandwiches are stuffed with smoked meats and herbs.
A Black-owned coffee shop renaissance is brewing in L.A. 25 cafes with all the vibes
ReplyDeletehttps://www.latimes.com/food/list/a-community-centered-renaissance-is-brewing-at-black-owned-coffee-shops
Here in Los Angeles, a dedicated group of Black coffee shop owners and roasters are on a mission to make the industry more diverse and inclusive, offering spaces that unapologetically celebrate Black and brown cultures, with coffee programs that involve intentional sourcing from countries like Ethiopia and Brazil.
“[These] are not just coffee shops,” said LaNisa Williams of Barista Life L.A. “These are spaces where amazing things happen. We’re giving back to the community through coffee shops.”
Compton local Geoffrey Martinez of Patria Coffee Roasters sought to center the surrounding BIPOC-majority neighborhood when opening his specialty coffee shop in 2018. A sign near the register reads: “Patria Coffee is a space intended for Communities of Color to share a safe place, free of criminalization and punitive treatment, that is relational and not simply transactional. We aim to uplift the beauty and richness of our cultural identity while offering a dignified coffee experience and quality, respectful of the existing Compton community structure and understandings.”
“They’re creating these spaces so that we feel safe,” Williams said. “We need these spaces for us to be able to express ourselves in our own communities … We are empowering ourselves through ownership and breaking generational curses, showing what happens when we take pride in our Black history.”
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-12-23/westlake-guatemalan-night-market
ReplyDeleteAt Westlake’s Guatemalan Night Market, street vendors create a piece of home
Then, they head to a corner of Los Angeles that reminds them of their homeland: the intersection of South Bonnie Brae Street and 6th Street, Westlake’s Guatemalan night market.
The market, a cultural hot spot for Guatemalans in Los Angeles, springs to life every evening alongside the sidewalk, where street vendors set up their stands with pop-up tents and wire shopping carts. Although some vendors still struggle to get permits, market regulars say measures taken by state and local authorities to enable sidewalk food vendors has helped build the community.
When the market began to form nearly eight years ago, it was nowhere near the Little Guatemala it is today, according to Glenda Rojas, one of the many women who runs her own stand. Initially, there were four vendors at the intersection, Rojas said. Now there are about 45.
“They’ve adapted to this little piece of land and how to go about maintaining it,” Rojas said of her fellow vendors, noting that she knows them all.
The vendors set their own schedules and prices, but there’s a code they respect among themselves: the division of territory on the sidewalk.
“Everyone has their designated space,” Rojas said in Spanish. “We can’t take a place that’s not ours. Everyone knows where to go.”
Maria Hernandez, 40, who sells tortas south of the intersection, said the need for more space can cause tension. She showed surveillance footage of a fight that broke out a month ago, though most vendors in general say people are respectful of each other.
“We know to be grateful,” Hernandez said. “We don’t pay rent, which helps. Right now, from my perspective, everything appears OK. I can make indigenous dishes from my country. The only problem is when people arrive to create more violence.”
What’s a superette? 12 unbearably cute markets to shop in L.A.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.latimes.com/food/list/superette-trendy-artisanal-neighborhood-markets-los-angeles
‘Hey, I grew that’: the Native American school that’s decolonizing foodways
ReplyDeletehttps://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/mar/07/native-american-school-decolonizing-foodways
Before joining her school’s gardening program this year, 14-year-old Emilie Lyons had never encountered an eggplant. She is a freshman at Umoⁿhoⁿ Nation public school, which serves more than 600 students on the Omaha reservation in Macy, Nebraska. When she brought the vegetable home, she and her dad looked up recipes for how to prepare the peculiar purple nightshade and were surprised by how tasty it was.
Umoⁿhoⁿ Nation is just one Indigenous-focused school across the US where administrators and educators are endeavoring to introduce healthy, culturally relevant foods into their lunches and other culinary initiatives.
Though each program is unique, they have similar objectives: to help kids reconnect with their heritage; to strengthen tribal sovereignty; and to combat the marked health disparities and disproportionate food insecurity – estimated at nearly 24% – affecting tribal communities in the aftermath of colonialism. About 68% of Native American children qualify for free lunches, meaning these may be the most reliable and nutritionally balanced meals they eat.
https://www.indigikitchen.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/NKH-Toolkit.pdf
Traditional Foods in Montana School Meals: A No Kid Hungry Indigenous Foods Toolkit
Southern Restaurants for Racial Justice, a foundation that supports young Black chefs
ReplyDeletehttps://www.leeinitiative.org/about-us
We should take notes from San Juan’s La Placita, which by day is a food market but at night
ReplyDeleteis a hotspot, with great outdoor dining options that effectively turn into one sprawling dance
floor after hours. Quincy Market already attracts people for nightlife, albeit mostly college
kids, but there’s a foundation there. Reclaim retail spaces and restaurants nobody wants to
go to and encourage more bars and local restaurants to occupy space there. This could
really breathe new life into the city’s nonexistent nightlife options.
102-Year-Old Woman Asks for Donations to a Local Food Pantry for Her Birthday and Her Community Delivers
ReplyDeletehttps://mymodernmet.com/102-year-old-woman-asks-for-donations-to-a-local-food-pantry-for-her-birthday
azelwood Cafe brings coffee and community to the neighborhood
ReplyDeletehttps://www.post-gazette.com/life/food/2024/03/12/hazelwood-cafe-pittsburgh-coffee-shop-sba-microloan-barista-black-entrepreneurs/stories/202403050063
In 2022, the Hazelwood native opened Hazelwood Cafe, offering coffee and other specialty drinks with a mission to bring local, quality goods to the neighborhood while providing a space for the community he grew up in to gather.
“It's just setting a community standard for how we all work together,” Gray said. “Also, there's not a lot of Black people in the coffee industry. That's another challenge I wanted to overcome.”
A year earlier, in 2021, Gray came upon a building on the corner of Second Avenue in Hazelwood that was listed for rent. To secure the space and launch his business, he applied for a Small Business Administration microloan through Bridgeway Capital, one of seven partner institutions working with the SBA in Western Pennsylvania.
Businesses can receive loans up to $50,000, “and with those loans comes free technical assistance from the intermediary that you're borrowing from,” said Kelly Hunt, SBA district director. “So they're a great tool, especially for startups.”
Gray has built relationships with neighboring businesses, including La Gourmandine, a French bakery, and Hazel Grove Brewing, collaborating on a beer.
“Their customers come over and have coffee while they eat their pastries,” he said. “When new businesses come out to Hazelwood, they reach out to us. So I think Hazelwood Cafe is setting the business standard of the neighborhood.”
When creating his business plan, Gray wanted to make sure the shop could support the neighborhood the way he was supported growing up here.
“We donate to charities for Christmas and Easter and we have different events throughout the year,” he continued. “The last event was beans to purchase for Steel City Smiling, which works to support Bl
Street vendors team up to open night market in San Bernardino
ReplyDeletehttps://www.cbsnews.com/losangeles/news/street-vendors-team-up-to-open-night-market-in-san-bernardino/
3/15/24
Why D.C.'s distillery boom went bust
ReplyDeletehttps://www.axios.com/local/washington-dc/2024/03/15/distilleries-close-competition
Kid C.H.E.F. program teaches healthy eating patterns
ReplyDeleteJuly 17, 2019
https://www.fbd.org/kid-c-h-e-f-program-teaches-healthy-eating-patterns/
Learning can be fun and very tasty too! Just ask the 14 kids – ages 8 -12 enrolled in the Kid C.H.E.F. program at the Laurel Public Library
The series of one-hour classes offers incentives for children to try new foods while having a positive, educational experience.
Alicia Vogel, Community Nutrition Educator, visits this library’s community room once a week to teach the kids about fruits, vegetables, grains, and dairy. Each lesson, of course, is accompanied by a recipe the students prepare, then enjoy.
At the first class, each student receives a drawstring backpack containing a chef’s hat, an apron, a recipe book, measuring spoons and cups so they can practice what they’ve learned at home
https://www.bonappetit.com/story/sesame-la
ReplyDeleteTake a Tour of Sesame LA, the Homey Superette in L.A.’s Chinatown
Now Sesame LA is a neighborhood superette that doesn’t simply feed the community; it engages it as well. The rotating roster of dishes, such as pickled eggplant and vegan duck noodle soup, is prepared by Asian elders in a kitchen run by Sivrican’s mother, Judy Mai Nguyen. Some dishes are made by Buddhist monks and the proceeds are donated to their temples. A curated selection of Vietnamese candies and snacks line one wall while Asian condiments, both familiar and artisan, line another. Produce is sourced from local regenerative farms.
Artisanal condiments such as sakura blossom shoyu and whiskey-laced garlic black bean sauce are interspersed with longtime favorite kitchen staples such as Mazola oil and Sriracha. Photo By Alex Lau
The large vegan and vegetarian selection in Sesame LA’s display case is an extension of Buddhist philosophy, which strives to cultivate compassion for other living beings. Photo By Alex Lau
Jennifer Pham, 60, is a close family friend to the Nguyens and helps prepare dishes such as pickled vegetables, vegan fish paste, and beef bourguignon. Photo By Alex Lau
Master Thien Tue, 50, of Pho Linh Buddhist temple in Garden Grove, CA, cooks various vegan dishes for Sesame LA, such as fried spring rolls with taro, carrots, and wood ear mushrooms. A portion of the proceeds from her dishes is donated to Pho Linh temple. Photo By Alex Lau
A vegan soup made with fresh asparagus, organic bunapi mushrooms, and algae vermicelli, or tóc tiên. Photo By Alex Lau
https://www.bonappetit.com/story/sesame-la
ReplyDeleteTake a Tour of Sesame LA, the Homey Superette in L.A.’s Chinatown
Now Sesame LA is a neighborhood superette that doesn’t simply feed the community; it engages it as well. The rotating roster of dishes, such as pickled eggplant and vegan duck noodle soup, is prepared by Asian elders in a kitchen run by Sivrican’s mother, Judy Mai Nguyen. Some dishes are made by Buddhist monks and the proceeds are donated to their temples. A curated selection of Vietnamese candies and snacks line one wall while Asian condiments, both familiar and artisan, line another. Produce is sourced from local regenerative farms.
Artisanal condiments such as sakura blossom shoyu and whiskey-laced garlic black bean sauce are interspersed with longtime favorite kitchen staples such as Mazola oil and Sriracha. Photo By Alex Lau
The large vegan and vegetarian selection in Sesame LA’s display case is an extension of Buddhist philosophy, which strives to cultivate compassion for other living beings. Photo By Alex Lau
Jennifer Pham, 60, is a close family friend to the Nguyens and helps prepare dishes such as pickled vegetables, vegan fish paste, and beef bourguignon. Photo By Alex Lau
Master Thien Tue, 50, of Pho Linh Buddhist temple in Garden Grove, CA, cooks various vegan dishes for Sesame LA, such as fried spring rolls with taro, carrots, and wood ear mushrooms. A portion of the proceeds from her dishes is donated to Pho Linh temple. Photo By Alex Lau
A vegan soup made with fresh asparagus, organic bunapi mushrooms, and algae vermicelli, or tóc tiên. Photo By Alex Lau
Black Church Food Security Network, Baltimore. 50 black farmers, fresh produce, seed funding, garden training to 50+ churches.
ReplyDeleteThe Cafe Where the Plates Come From the Kiln Next Door
ReplyDeleteA peek inside L'estudio, the cafe and ceramics studio in N.Y.C.
https://www.bonappetit.com/story/lestudio-nyc
Refettorio Ambrosiano
ReplyDeletehttps://www.refettorioharlem.org/our-story
https://www.foodforsoul.it/
guests are invited to sit at communal tables and are served by volunteers. Adapts "food waste" for tasty meals served free to people in need.
Black Food, We are each other's harvest
ReplyDeletehttps://www.inquirer.com/food/southeast-asian-market-fdr-park-2024-open-date-postponed-20240321.html
ReplyDeleteThe Southeast Asian Market in FDR Park is postponed
This year’s start date, slated for March 30, has been pushed back to the “end of April,” according to the city
The Southeast Asian Market, often referred to as the SEA Market, has become a well established and increasingly high-profile part of Philly’s food scene — to the point that the city designated a permanent space for it in plans for FDR’s ongoing renovation. The planned market pavilion, to be situated in the southwest corner of the park, coincided with a $100,000 grant from the Philadelphia Department of Commerce that was announced in 2022.
That recognition is hard-won: What’s now an organized operation with 74 vendors began informally in the ’70s and ’80s, with Cambodian and Lao refugees coming to FDR Park to enjoy the outdoor space and sell foods that reminded them of home. As the gathering gained steam, it met resistance. Vendors were at times raided by the police, their food destroyed or taken — leading to some market-less summers.
U Bahn, underground bar, Philadelphia
ReplyDeletehttps://aversapr.com/aversapr/u-bahn-opens-thursday-march-5-2015-in-midtown-village-with-all-things-local-food-beer-and-music
https://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/news/2015/03/02/an-underground-german-subway-inspired-arcarde-bar.html
Culinary Hubs Put a Twist on Home Cooking
ReplyDeletehttps://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/20/business/home-restaurant-conversions-real-estate.html
Nestled in the dense, residential Los Angeles neighborhood of Victor Heights, a tightly packed plot of Craftsman and Victorian homes has stood the test of time, serving as single-family residences in one of the city’s oldest neighborhoods.
Yet these bungalows will soon serve a new purpose — micro restaurants offering Taiwanese pineapple cake and freshly ground hamburgers in a compound called Alpine Courtyard, morphing the pleasures of dining out with the nostalgic comforts of home.
This adaptive reuse is part of a growing national trend: From Los Angeles to Nashville, developers are transforming clusters of old homes into walkable culinary hubs for the surrounding high-density neighborhoods.
The conversions are indicative of neighborhood revitalization, said Stuart A. Gabriel, a finance professor and the director of the Ziman Center for Real Estate at the University of California, Los Angeles. He added that the loss of homes might not be significant enough to move the needle on the housing shortage at large.
“Certainly, we’re concerned about the displacement of families,” he said. “On the other hand, there are a whole set of positives in terms of amenities and services, and then improvements, property values and equity gains for the people who actually own housing there.”
For houses to successfully convert to restaurants, he said, certain conditions must exist.
“There’s some critical mass of population, there’s a community or an effort at community building, there’s foot traffic and some sort of architectural or other charm to the structure that allows it to be converted into some other use,” he said.
One of the entrepreneurs, Jihee Kim, began Perilla as a homegrown food business during the pandemic and opened a physical location in Alpine Courtyard in July, serving Korean banchan in a 260-square-foot converted garage.
“Every day, at least 30 to 40 percent of customers are repeat, and women more than men,” she said. “They live in this neighborhood, but I also have a lot of people who bought my stuff during the pandemic.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/20/business/home-restaurant-conversions-real-estate.html
https://www.foodshedcooperative.com/about-us
ReplyDeleteFoodshed works directly with farmers, eaters, and entrepreneurs to cultivate an equitable food system in San Diego while addressing the challenges posed by the climate crisis.
Founded in March 2020, Foodshed increases access to healthy food, addresses food insecurity in low-income communities, and empowers small farms to produce quality harvests.
To bring healthy, nutritious, and affordable produce to local families, Foodshed connects its network of small and urban regenerative farms directly to communities that need it most.
Dallas Soul Food Festival
ReplyDeletehttps://www.facebook.com/events/645627799795637/?_rdr
'Boston Public Library’s new chef to lead cooking program in Roxbury'
ReplyDeletehttps://www.cbsnews.com/boston/news/boston-public-library-roxbury-cooking-chef-in-residence/
https://www.bpl.org/nutrition-lab/
https://www.dailytable.org/cooking-classes
https://www.wbur.org/the-common/2024/03/26/bpl-chef-nutrition-education-community-food
3/26/24
Inside the Roxbury Branch of the Boston Public Library is a bright, HGTV-like kitchen that will soon be home to the first-ever Chef-in-Residence.
The new chef will make her home at the Nutrition Lab, and it's all thanks to an anonymous donation to the Boston Public Library Fund.
All of her library-based programs will be free. Fernandez hopes to empower people to explore cooking techniques, local ingredients, nutrition, and Boston history through hands-on classes and demonstrations.
She knows people's ideas of what is healthy can be subjective, so she wants to focus on what's beneficial.
"My goal is to talk to people about when you're purchasing food, when you're deciding what to eat, consider what's beneficial for your body and where you're at right now," she said.
https://www.jsonline.com/story/money/business/2024/03/26/freeses-candy-shoppe-opens-new-store-in-milwaukee-public-market/73106998007/
ReplyDeleteAt The Community Table, diners sit down as strangers but leave with new friends
ReplyDeletehttps://www.jsonline.com/story/entertainment/dining/2024/03/26/the-community-table-milwaukee-communal-dining-experience/72886598007/
Most of us around the table had never met before. That table of strangers — now fully versed in one another’s upcoming vacations, wedding plans and home renovations — came together that night because of Jake and Becca Timms, a couple who’ve created an intimate, communal dining experience called The Community Table, aimed at bringing strangers together around good food and warm hospitality.
The couple hosts two multi-course dinners each month at rotating locations across Milwaukee.
They announce the month’s location and menu on The Community Table Instagram; tickets open to the first eight to 12 people who reserve a seat. The dinners include a cocktail and wine, plus a four-course meal made by Jake. And, of course, an opportunity to mingle with people they’d otherwise never meet.
Courses — such as individual charcuterie plates; salads with roasted squash, crispy shallot and pistachios; deviled eggs with trout roe; steak frites with bearnaise sauce; wild mushroom risotto with braised short rib; and bourbon pecan pie — come to the table with leisurely spacing, leaving plenty of time to chat between each.
https://www.hillrag.com/2024/03/26/attend-east-city-arts-2024-capital-art-book-fair/
ReplyDeleteAttend East City Art’s 2024 Capital Art Book Fair
Supper clubs in London
ReplyDeletehttps://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/26/travel/london-supperclubs.html
https://www.londonpopups.com/
Many local supper clubs, shared through word of mouth or social media, are the passion projects of self-taught cooks wanting to test their skills on beloved cuisines. Those wanting to attract broader clientele post their clubs on sites like Eventbrite and DesignMyNight or offer bookings on food experience sites like Eatwith and WeFiFo.
What separates a supper club from a pop-up, aficionados say, involves distinct markers: a venue that, if not at someone’s home, is an intimate space rather than a restaurant. Diners tend to pay for the meal before they arrive, which observers say makes the experience feel less transactional. The menu is fixed (though dietary requests can sometimes be taken into account) and tends to involve a unifying story or theme, often drawing on the chef’s background. And diners, solo or in groups, are heavily encouraged to socialize.
“There is something quite intimate, anarchic and unusual going to someone’s home that you’ve never met before,” said Kerstin Rodgers, the author of “Supper Club,” a cookbook and how-to, and an early adopter of the trend who began hosting grass-roots events in 2009 at her home.
“What people look for in a supper club is a certain degree of authenticity,” said Alice Whittington, 41, who runs a Malaysian-themed club under the name Eastern Platters. At her dinners, hosted at neighborhood bars and community centers, Ms. Whittington makes shareable courses that are meant to be passed around, and curates a playlist of Southeast Asian music.
https://www.instagram.com/easternplatters/
https://www.ft.com/content/684252ce-7b37-4a2a-a0f7-15fe19e071d9
ReplyDeleteThe 50 greatest food stores in the world
Obviously, this list isn't definitive. But aim to have great, amazing unique stores.
Samuel Alden, store leader, Fry's
ReplyDeletecreates retail-tainment events to generate in store excitement around big sports events, and works with local vendors for food sampling, live music, and a local artists show.
Kowalski's, Minneapolis
ReplyDeleteFocus on area artisans, family recipes/special products in deli, curated gift shop.
Fresh by Brookshire, Texas
Chef prepared entries, ramen and pho counters, taco bar, brick oven pizza, artisan bakery.
Stores have a coffee bar, hand crafted gelato, patio dining, outdoor cafe, live music, on site parks with children's playgrounds.
Schnuck Markets, St. Louis
Eatwell Market, wellness app, nexus of food, wellness and community, coffee bar, kombucha station, kitchen
Giant Eagle
pets
Lowes Food, NC and the Southeast
ReplyDeletebakery department cakewalks, beer hunt clubbbs, communal dinners along local Main Streets, "chicken dance."
... eatertainment
Progressive Grocer
ReplyDeleteto invest in customer experience, invest in employees
investing in in-store dining
Sprouts, in house coffee bar with workspace area
Northgate Gonzalez, food halls.
People want a more social experience when they shop.
https://www.inquirer.com/things-to-do/center-city-sips-happy-hour-discounts-locations-2024.html
ReplyDeleteCenter City SIPS, Philly’s summer-long happy hour, kicks off its 20th year anniversary in June
These are bars and restaurants offering happy hour discounts in Center City SIPS for summer 2024, kicking off in June.
This year marks two decades since the summer-long Wednesday night happy hour began, bringing thousands to Center City District over the years. For its 20th anniversary, SIPS is delivering discounts from more than 70 businesses, a social area in Dilworth Park with a roller rink, and the creation of its own craft beer in partnership with Broad Street Brewing.
Every Wednesday, 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., from June 5 through Aug. 28, many venues will be offering $7 cocktails, $6 wine, $5 beers, and half-off appetizers. Some restaurants will take 15% off your dinner bill after 7 p.m.
The official kick off of SIPS will take place June 5 at Dilworth Park, where SIPS patrons will have exclusive access to the Rothman Orthopaedics Roller Rink and enjoy the reveal of Broad Street Brewing’s SIPS Summer Splash, a Mexican-style lager with lime, available throughout the summer at Dilworth Park’s Air Grille.
Query about multi-course cooking classes.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.flickr.com/photos/rllayman/53807841074/in/dateposted/