Chattanooga Times Free Press

405 Mid-East Bistro closing

- BY ALLISON SHIRK COLLINS STAFF WRITER

After opening just eight months ago, 405 Mid-East Bistro plans to close at the end of April.

The downtown bistro that focuses on Middle Eastern Mediterran­ean food was opened by Chicago restaurate­ur Rashad Moughrabi, who’s originally from Chattanoog­a. The bistro at 405 Market St. near Jack’s Alley served Lebanese and Palestinia­n-style food.

The announceme­nt was made on the restaurant’s Facebook page and states its last day open will be Tuesday. Moughrabi said the restaurant employed 20 people at its high point.

“Unfortunat­ely, we haven’t been able to build enough interest in our unique cuisine and style to make our business viable in Chattanoog­a,” the post states. “The amazing support that we did receive, and the incredible people that we were fortunate enough to meet along our journey is something that we will forever cherish.”

The space where the restaurant is located has struggled to keep a business in it the past few years. The location previously held The Henpecked Chicken before it closed in 2017. Applebee’s also closed next door.

Moughrabi told the Times Free Press that parking could have been “a little bit” of a problem, but that wasn’t the difference maker.

“It was a different style of food around Chattanoog­a,” he said. “It didn’t hit home that well.”

Moughrabi said the location may have been a factor though, noting the recent closing of the Bluewater Grille just a block away.

Dozens of customers commented on the restaurant’s farewell post, stating that their location and lack of parking was the issue and not the food. But River City Company officials said there’s plenty of parking in the area, citing a parking study from 2018. River City Co. is a nonprofit that promotes developmen­t in

the downtown area.

The study states that within a one-block walk of the Market Street location, there are seven public parking lots that account for 558 parking spaces that were never more than 60% utilized at the peak of parking demand, whether on a weekday or weekend.

That also doesn’t include all the street, metered parking that fronts both sides of Market Street on that block, said Amy Donahue, River City’s director of marketing and communicat­ions.

Donahue said there are non-American eateries downtown that have been in business for years, including Indian, Thai, Latin, Greek, Chinese and other ethnic food options. She said someone already has reached out to River City about a new concept for the space, even though River City doesn’t own or lease the property.

“We are excited that people reach out to us about the concepts they would like to see in downtown Chattanoog­a and how they plan to make it happen,” Donahue said.

In the U.S., almost onethird of small businesses close within two years of opening, and that number jumps to half of all small businesses closing within five years, according to the Small Business Administra­tion.

“It’s not an easy and guaranteed successful path to start your own business, and downtown Chattanoog­a is not excluded from that,” Donahue said. “However, you have many successful eateries in downtown that have been in business a long time, including eateries that are located on that very block.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY DAVE FLESSNER ?? 405 Mid-East Bistro announced this week it plans to close its doors after just eight months in business.
STAFF PHOTO BY DAVE FLESSNER 405 Mid-East Bistro announced this week it plans to close its doors after just eight months in business.

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