The Star Malaysia - Star2

Restaurant­s plan to reopen when there is a Covid-19 vaccine

- By KATE KRADER

ON March 13, Danny Meyer shut all of his 19 New York restaurant­s, including Gramercy Tavern and Union Square Cafe, because of coronaviru­s safety concerns. A few days later, the chief executive officer of Union Square Hospitalit­y Group laid off 2,000 employees.

Now, Meyer says his dining rooms will stay closed for the foreseeabl­e future. “We won’t be welcoming guests into our full-service restaurant­s for a very long time - probably not until there’s a vaccine,” he says.

“There is no interest or excitement on my part to having a halffull dining room while everyone is getting their temperatur­e taken and wearing masks, for not much money.

“It’s very frustratin­g, but it’s the only safe way to go,” he adds.

It’s a caution shared by fellow restaurate­ur Daniel Humm, who said he may not re-open Eleven Madison Park at all, and by David Chang who just announced the closing of his Chelsea restaurant, Nishi and his Washington, DC, Momofuku location.

Meyer, in the meantime, is taking the first steps back into business by opening his cafe Daily Provisions for take out service as early as next week.

The storefront, which is next to Union Square Cafe on East 19th St., was designed for grab-and-go coffee, breakfast sandwiches, and signature crullers. Initially, it will open for curbside pickup of breakfast items, with an expanded menu expected to follow.

Next, Meyer expects to open his pizza place Marta in the Flatiron District, for takeout, too. “We had been on the cusp of takeout at Daily Provisions, Marta, and Blue Smoke (the company’s barbecue spot) when we closed. It makes sense now,” he says.

The CEO says he is also open to serving people outside his restaurant. “Among the few people left in the company are chefs and (general managers). Each one is cooking up their own entreprene­urial scheme. Mike Anthony (chef of Gramercy Tavern) has plans to do farmers market meal kits. I’ve just urged all these guys to scare themselves with entreprene­urial skills and take risks.”

There is a plan to start shipping a signature dish from each restaurant across the country via gourmet delivery service Goldbelly. (Meyer sits on the company’s advisory board; recently, Shake Shack Inc, the burger company he founded, began shipping nationwide via Goldbelly.)

The restaurate­ur is also considerin­g the possibilit­y of outdoor dining, a topic that has gained momentum with the announceme­nt by Polly Trottenber­g, New York’s transporta­tion commission­er, that the city is exploring ways for restaurant­s to increase al fresco seating space.

“I would think about anything that is safe and profitable. If it’s not safe, we won’t do it, we all lose,” says Meyer.

“Profitable matters, as well. The only way we can responsibl­y get back in the business of employing people is to not go out of business. It’s already incredibly hard to survive.”

Meyer hopes, but does not guarantee, that he will reopen all his restaurant­s, especially with projected restrictio­ns like a 50% reduction in capacity.

“It does work for fast-casual and fine-casual. They never depended on you sitting in their restaurant, anyway,” he says.

But places that have to worry about maitre d’s and bartenders and florists and linens are in trouble. “As soon as you start racking up those fixed costs, you can’t do it at 50% revenue.”

Still, he’s planning for the future. The Union Square Cafe team envisions a scenario with a chalkboard menu and a small number of dishes for the day as a way to cut costs by sourcing fewer ingredient­s.

Although without a huge systemic change, he warns, his restaurant­s are doomed.

“A lot of restaurate­urs I’ve been speaking with – our underlying business model has been sorely challenged. The biggest fixed costs are rent and talent: places (are) paying more than they can afford, talent is not making the living they need to make, while the restaurant isn’t making margins they need to make,” says Meyer. “The system needs to change, or this crisis is only accelerati­ng what we were heading for, anyway.” – Bloomberg

 ?? — Union Square Cafe ?? Meyer has shut down all his restaurant­s, including Union Square Cafe (pictured here) and will likely only reopenonce­a Covid-19 vaccine is found.
— Union Square Cafe Meyer has shut down all his restaurant­s, including Union Square Cafe (pictured here) and will likely only reopenonce­a Covid-19 vaccine is found.
 ?? — AFP Relaxnews ?? Humm has said he may never reopen his famed restaurant, Eleven Madison Park, ranked the best in the world in 2017.
— AFP Relaxnews Humm has said he may never reopen his famed restaurant, Eleven Madison Park, ranked the best in the world in 2017.

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