The Mercury News

Albany Bowl permanentl­y closing due to shutdowns

Beloved alley frequented by families, Cal students going away after 71 years

- By Chris Treadway Chris Treadway is a former reporter, columnist and editor for the Bay Area News Group specializi­ng in community news and local history.

ALBANY >> Albany Bowl, one of the city’s oldest and bestloved institutio­ns, is closing forever after 71 years, another business victim of the extended coronaviru­s shutdowns.

“(It’s) no rumor; it’s true,” said John Tierney, who has owned the bowling center since 1985.

“I’m here because we’re starting to empty the offices,” an emotional Tierney said Dec. 19 in the darkened alley. “I had to lay off 40 employees. I called them all individual­ly to tell them.”

With no cash f low to counter overhead for most of the year and no government relief apparently coming soon, the decision was unavoidabl­e.

“Money. And taxes. And government,” Tierney said. “I’ve spent $700,000 out- ofpocket (since the shutdown) and I can’t keep going that way.”

He cited large chain retailers with deep pockets such as Home Depot, Costco and Walmart that have been allowed to continue reduced operations, while smaller and locally owned businesses have had to remain shut. T ier ney also said he had to pay a large tax bill two weeks ago. And for the first few months of the pandemic he continued to cover the cost of employee health insurance.

“I can’t hold on for six more months,” he said.

Inside the building he showed plastic partitions between lanes and arcade games, with sanitizer stations placed in numerous locations, all never used.

“I put thousands into safety precaution­s” in anticipati­on of safely reopening, Tierney said. “We redid the lanes; we repainted. We’ve had everything ready.”

Albany Bowl opened on Aug. 5, 1949, and then, as now, featured a restaurant, cocktail lounge (now called Tierney’s Sports Bar), a billiard room and a large parking lot to go with its 36 lanes. The center has weathered the rise of larger suburban facilities and a decline in the popularity of bowling in general, staying a favorite place for leagues, birthday parties, fundraiser­s and corporate events. It has modernized with the latest scoring equipment and 10foot screens at each lane. The center’s mascot, Mr. Pin, an employee dressed as a large bowling pin, has made regular appearance­s.

“We’ve had so many families coming through this bowling center: three and four generation­s,” Tierney said. “It’s sad for the community, it’s sad for the families, it’s sad for the specialnee­ds families that came here.”

Among the regulars over the decades have been UC Berkeley students.

“We’re very attached to the University of California in Berkeley,” Tierney said. “The athletic department is not going to have a bowling center anymore. The Cal football team comes to bowl here.”

Since word of the closure began circulatin­g, Tierney said, the center has been getting at least a dozen calls a day, including one from Albany Police Chief John Geissberge­r, who exclaimed, “Oh my God.”

Finding a buyer for the large building near the city’s northern border property won’t be hard, but Tierney doubts it will continue as a bowling alley. The city is in the process of developing a specific plan to encourage larger and denser residentia­l developmen­t on San Pablo Avenue and the Albany Bowl site has already been identified in Albany’s 2015-23 housing element as a potential project location.

“I don’t have an answer for what they’re going to do,” Tierney said. “I’m just trying to get through the heartache.”

 ?? PHOTO BY CHRIS TREADWAY ?? Albany Bowl owner John Tierney placed plastic partitions between lanes with sanitizer stations placed in numerous locations, all never used. “I put thousands into safety precaution­s” in anticipati­on of safely reopening, Tierney said.
PHOTO BY CHRIS TREADWAY Albany Bowl owner John Tierney placed plastic partitions between lanes with sanitizer stations placed in numerous locations, all never used. “I put thousands into safety precaution­s” in anticipati­on of safely reopening, Tierney said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States