The Hamilton Spectator

Kimbal Musk wants to feed people, Silicon Valley-style

- KIM SEVERSON

MEMPHIS, TENN. — It’s easy to understand why some people in this town of soul music and dry-rub ribs don’t know what to make of the tall tech billionair­e in a big white cowboy hat who has been opening restaurant­s and buying up hundreds of acres of land that used to grow cotton.

Kimbal Musk, 45, got rich working in tech alongside his older brother, Elon. Now he wants to do for food what his brother has done for electric cars and space travel.

Musk is promoting a philosophy he calls “real food,” which nourishes the body, the farmer and the planet. It doesn’t sound much different from what writers like Michael Pollan and everyone who has ever helped start a farmers’ market or community garden have preached for years.

But Musk has big ideas about what the Silicon Valley crowd likes to call the food space, which is as exciting to him as the internet was in 1995. “We’ve never seen this kind of innovation around food,” he said.

In short, he wants to create a network of business, educationa­l and agricultur­al ventures big enough to swing the U.S.’s food system back to one based on healthy, local food grown on chemical-free farms.

“Food is this beautiful gift we give each other three times a day,” he’ll often tell a crowd, “but you couldn’t design a worse food system than what we have.” Like a politician on the stump, Musk travels extensivel­y to pound home the message that Americans — especially millennial­s — are demanding real food and rejecting what he calls industrial food. This year alone, he is on track to speak at nearly 50 food and business conference­s. Under an umbrella brand called the Kitchen, Musk is spending millions of dollars on a portfolio of food-related projects, and forming partnershi­ps with foundation­s and government­s in several cities.

He took the name from the first restaurant he opened, in Boulder, Colorado, in 2004 with chef Hugo Matheson. Since then, they have developed three other restaurant concepts. Musk’s nonprofit organizati­on has installed 425 teaching gardens in schools.

Unlike some of his colleagues in the tech world, Musk is driven more by cooking than by the love of a good algorithm. Growing up in Pretoria, South Africa, he started in the kitchen at age 12, making meals as a way to bring his family together. His mother, the model Maye Musk, worked as a dietitian to support the family after she divorced his father, Errol Musk, an engineer and pilot.

At her house, Musk said, “it was all brown bread and plain yogurt.” At his dad’s, he and his brother and sister, Tosca (now a film producer and director), ate whatever the maid cooked, usually in front of the TV. “It wasn’t very good,” he recalled. “I noticed that when I cooked, my dad especially would make us all sit down and eat together,” he said. “I loved it.”

He graduated from Queen’s University in Kingston and made his first fortune in 1999, when he and his brother sold Zip2 — a digital mapping service that helped newspapers produce online city guides — to Compaq Computer for $307 million. He became an investor in his brother’s other ventures, including PayPal and Tesla

Set financiall­y, Musk moved from Silicon Valley to New York and enrolled in the French Culinary Institute (now the Internatio­nal Culinary Center). He lived near the World Trade Center, and after the 9/11 attacks, spent six weeks volunteeri­ng as a cook for firefighte­rs and other people working the pile. He finally understood, he said, the link between food and community.

Soon after, he and Jen Lewin, his first wife, left for Colorado, where he met Matheson and opened the Kitchen in 2004. With its deep farm-to-table ethos and casually elegant style, the restaurant was an immediate hit.

Both projects were running just fine without him, so Musk became chief executive of another tech company. Then, on a 2010 trip with his family in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, he was sliding down a snowy hill on an inner tube when it flipped. He broke his neck and was temporaril­y paralyzed.

During the two months he had to lie flat on his back, it became clear that he wanted to devote himself to food. He and his wife divorced; he quit the tech company and dedicated himself to changing the way people eat.

Musk became interested in school gardens. He remains friendly with his ex-wife and Lewin designed modular curved plastic planters that could be arranged in any schoolyard. Paired with instructio­ns on how they can be used to teach subjects like science, the first gardens were installed in Denver schools in 2011.

Musk has begun a chain of hyperlocal restaurant­s called Next Door, which he and Matheson envision as the Applebee’s for a new generation.

All the food is cooked from scratch. Menus feature wild salmon, burgers of local pasture-raised beef and big Greek salads with vegetables from nearby farms. Entree prices average $14, and the restaurant­s are designed so customers sit down together to eat and get their meals almost as soon as they order.

The first opened six years ago next to the Kitchen in Boulder. In September, another opened in a huge urban renewal project in Memphis called Crosstown Concourse, an abandoned Sears distributi­on centre that has been turned into apartments and shops, with a school, a health clinic and an arts centre. The partners plan to add 50 more Next Door restaurant­s by the end of 2020. Musk also opened an outpost of his more upscale Kitchen restaurant inside a 4,500-acre urban park called Shelby Farms in the centre of Memphis. But he insisted that he be allowed to buy 300 acres nearby that for decades had been used to grow cotton, so he could turn it into an organic farm, a project now in the works.

He is also testing the Kitchenett­e, a little takeout spot in Shelby Farms that sells locally grown, well-prepared meals for about $5 — his answer to a fast-food restaurant.

Musk’s nonprofit arm, the Kitchen Community, has put learning gardens into 100 Memphis schools, providing both staff and materials. Each one costs about $40,000, money that comes from the Musk Foundation and local donors. He has placed his gardens in schools in Los Angeles, Pittsburgh and 150 in Chicago, where Mayor Rahm Emanuel gave the project $2 million in city funds. By 2020, Musk hopes to have them in more than 1,000 schools.

Critics have taken on his Square Roots project, too. The idea is to train young farmers by teaching them to grow greens with nothing but enhanced water and LEDs in shipping containers, and then sell the lettuce and kale to local restaurant­s and office workers.

Last year the project installed 10 containers in the parking lot of the old Pfizer factory in New York City, each able to grow as much produce as 2 acres of dirt. In August, Square Roots secured $5.4 million in private seed funding, and has grants from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. Musk wants one in every major city.

 ??  ?? Kimbal Musk, entreprene­ur and brother of Elon Musk, in his restaurant Upstairs in Boulder, Colo.
Kimbal Musk, entreprene­ur and brother of Elon Musk, in his restaurant Upstairs in Boulder, Colo.
 ??  ?? Greens, below, grown at Square Roots, right, where produce is grown in 10 shipping containers using only enhanced water and LEDs, in New York.
Greens, below, grown at Square Roots, right, where produce is grown in 10 shipping containers using only enhanced water and LEDs, in New York.
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