Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Roethlisbe­rger makes deal to open North Shore restaurant

- By Mark Belko

Ben Roethlisbe­rger’s days on the North Shore won’t end whenever he retires.

The Steelers quarterbac­k has completed a deal to open a 7,100square-foot restaurant in the seven-story office building now under constructi­on on North Shore Drive near PNC Park and across the street from the Hyatt Place hotel.

With the signing, Mr. Roethlisbe­rger will be reunited with his former backfield mate Jerome Bettis, who has his own restaurant on North Shore Drive just a couple of blocks away.

The quarterbac­k will become the latest high-profile sports celebrity to opena restaurant in the region.

Mr. Roethlisbe­rger’s ex-teammate Hines Ward has a restaurant in Seven Fields. Mike Ditka, an Aliquippa native and former Pitt tightend who played for and coached the Chicago Bears, has restaurant­s in Robinson and Pine.

In addition, ex-Pirate Manny Sanguillen has Manny’s BBQ at PNC Park, and former Pitt and Miami Dolphins quarterbac­k Dan

Marino is a partner in Anthony’s Coal Fired Pizza restaurant­s at four locations in the region.

North Shore Seven, as Mr. Roethlisbe­rger is calling the restaurant, is expected to open in spring 2019 in time for the start of the Pirates season.

The Steelers quarterbac­k is teaming on the venture with longtime business partner Scott Kier. Mr. Roethlisbe­rger is a partner with Mr. Kier in four other restaurant­s: the Savannah Taphouse in Savannah, Ga., and the King Street Grille in Charleston, Myrtle Beach and Murrells Inlet, all in South Carolina.

On the North Shore, the two are planning a restaurant where everything from the entrees, sandwiches and sauces to the dressings will be made from scratch. The menu will feature appetizers, sandwiches and entrees. The bar will have at least 50 taps, including craft beers.

Although Mr. Kier said the restaurant will be sportsthem­ed, he stressed that it will not be a sports bar per se, although those in Myrtle Beach, Charleston, and Savannah have won best sports bar honors.

The goal is to have more of a food-driven, familyfrie­ndly concept that will appeal to diners throughout the year — not just on game days when the North Shore is teeming with crowds.

What will separate North Shore Seven from the other restaurant­s and bars along North Shore Drive will be the food, Mr. Kier said. At the other locations in the south, “The food has always been the difference maker for us,” he said.

Mr. Roethlisbe­rger has been looking to open a restaurant in Pittsburgh for more than two years, previously considerin­g locations in the North Hills and at other spots along North Shore Drive.

According to Mr. Kier, he is paying close attention to North Shore Seven, looking to go above and beyond what the duo has done with the restaurant­s in South Carolina and Georgia.

“This is Ben’s little baby right now, other than the Steelers, of course,” said Mr. Kier, who is owner and operator of the four other restaurant­s. He and Mr. Roethlisbe­rger first met during a golf outing a decade ago.

Although a section of the restaurant will contain some memorabili­a related to Mr. Roethlisbe­rger’s football career, it’s not going to be “100 percent Ben everything,” Mr. Kier said.

Barry Ford, president of developmen­t in Pittsburgh for Continenta­l Real Estate Companies, hired by the Steelers and the Pirates to develop the land between Heinz Field and PNC Park, said he had been hoping to bring the King Street Grille concept to the North Shore for some time.

“Having our hometown quarterbac­k involved is a big bonus for us,” he said. “They have terrific restaurant­s in the Lowcountry of Charleston and Savannah. Their food is really good. They have an executive chef. They do their own menus. They make their own food.”

The restaurant will be located on the east side of the building near the Water Steps. There will be an outdoor dining area. The building will be anchored by German software company SAP.

 ?? Steph Chambers/Post-Gazette ?? A Continenta­l Building Co. constructi­on worker walks through a structure on North Shore Drive that will eventually house Ben Roethlisbe­rger’s restaurant, North Shore Seven.
Steph Chambers/Post-Gazette A Continenta­l Building Co. constructi­on worker walks through a structure on North Shore Drive that will eventually house Ben Roethlisbe­rger’s restaurant, North Shore Seven.

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