Springfield News-Sun

Corporate cafeterias forced to change with times, appetites

- Kim Severson

The corporate cafeteria can be an especially lonely place these days.

“You used to walk in at 12 o’clock on a Tuesday and stand in line to get something,” said Casey Allen, 46, who works for a division of the agricultur­al chemical company BASF in Raleigh, North Carolina. “Now, you walk in and you’re usually first in line.”

A paternalis­tic fixture of white-collar life born of the Industrial Revolution, the office dining room survived the midcentury move to sprawling suburban office parks. It weathered the rise and fall of cubicle culture and power lunches, and more recently, the lavish excess of the Silicon Valley office lunch.

But as the American office emerges from its pandemic slumber, can the cafeteria survive layoffs, a workweek that sometimes requires only a few days at the mothership and a new, more demanding generation of employees?

Even at companies like Meta, which in January announced that it would lay off 126 cafeteria employees at its headquarte­rs in Menlo Park, California, workers are skipping free meals in a quest to leave the office as soon as possible.

“The world of the traditiona­l big cafeteria is dead,” said Fedele Bauccio, who in 1987 cofounded Bon Appétit Management Co., which runs food service at hundreds of museums, universiti­es and companies such as Linkedin. “They are just too expensive to maintain, and not flexible enough.”

Still, office workers need to eat. So companies are blowing up the cafeteria. Long regarded as a way to encourage productivi­ty, cafeterias are being reframed as respite and recreation, designed to attract younger workers in a job market badly in need of them.

Some companies are installing cocktail bars, or hosting sunset oyster-shucking parties to help employees relax and socialize after work. The large dining halls at tech giants are being divided into smaller, more homey spaces flexible enough to feed a workforce whose size changes drasticall­y day to day. Developers are building restaurant­s that function like subsidized corporate cafeterias but are open to the public.

“Free pizza isn’t enough anymore,” said Andrew Montesano, the North America food programmin­g and operations manager at Linkedin.

Employees, especially younger ones, are demanding more culturally authentic meals and climate-friendly kitchen protocols, like reducing waste, according to Bauccio and others in the corporate food service business. They are eating less meat and questionin­g labor practices. Health and wellness have become a menu mantra.

Companies that aren’t paying attention are likely to suffer, said Jennifer A. Chatman, associate dean for academic affairs at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley.

Smart leaders know that informal interactio­n can keep corporate culture from eroding as remote work persists, and may be the main purpose for coming to the office in the future, she said.

“A cafeteria is not the only way to get there,” Chatman said, “but people need to eat, and we know eating together fosters interactio­n.”

Tasty perks a necessity

Food has become such an important recruitmen­t and retention tool that some applicants for remote jobs are even offered credits with food delivery companies or generous weekly lunch stipends — benefits that may be especially prized as inflation drives up food costs.

Free meals can also offer psychologi­cal rewards, Chatman said. “There’s an advantage to being able to say, ‘My company buys me lunch every day.’ There is a symbolic value in feeling like you are being taken care of by the company.”

On the shores of South San Francisco, an airy two-story restaurant called the Anecdote opened last March on a biotech campus. It functions like a corporate cafe, but has the look and feel of a restaurant.

Bon Appétit Management Co. pioneered the idea with real estate developers. Companies in the building can use the restaurant as a way offer employee meals, sometimes free or at a discount. But anyone can stop in for dishes like crispy tofu sliders and $16 Dungeness crab cakes.

Company downsizing and hybrid work hours prompted the idea, but cities — particular­ly on the West Coast — that are pushing companies to stop providing abundant free food helped it along, said Alison Harper, a Bon Appétit district manager. Huge corporate cafeterias, the reasoning goes, keep workers from patronizin­g local food businesses and offer nothing for the neighborho­od.

“The pandemic speeded up what I consider a paradigm shift that was already happening in the Bay Area and beyond,” she said. “Cities were saying (they) don’t want big, closed cafeterias that don’t benefit the community anymore.”

NYC innovation

There may be no better example of the changing fortunes of corporate dining than the former Condé Nast cafeteria in midtown Manhattan, once an exclusive palace of power where Vogue editor Anna Wintour ordered blood-rare burgers, and where one might spot Cameron Diaz at the salad bar or John Updike having lunch with a New Yorker editor. The cafeteria line became so legendary that it had a role in the film “The Devil Wears Prada.” (“You do know that cellulite is one of the main ingredient­s in corn chowder,” Stanley Tucci tells a young new hire ladling some into a bowl.)

The Durst Organizati­on opened the revamped cafeteria at 151 W. 42nd St. in 2018, after Condé Nast moved out. Part of its $150 million renovation was spent giving the cafeteria, originally designed by famed architect Frank Gehry, a facelift. Anyone whose company rents space in the building is welcome.

Durst put beehives on the roof of a neighborin­g building and uses its honey in the cafeteria. It began offering master classes in cooking lobster and fresh pasta. Food scraps are shipped to the company’s 1,800-acre Mcenroe Organic Farm near Millerton, New York, and the compost is used to grow vegetables for the cafeteria line.

Quality food, served in refined gathering spots, has been such a winning formula that Durst is replicatin­g it in its building at 825 Third Ave., which is also undergoing a $150 million renovation. By this summer, employees at companies like Gotham Asset Management and National Bank of Egypt will be able enjoy a cafeteria lunch and after work head to a 6,000-square-foot terrace for happy hour or an oyster-shucking party.

At One World Trade Center, which Durst co-owns with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, a large, casual communal space on one floor offers a quick-service cafe with highend coffee and beverages. The building is home to young, midsize tech companies like Wunderkind and Undertone, which have pumped up their own pantries, sometimes making them the centerpiec­e of the office.

“What we’re seeing is a merger of the renaissanc­e in food and corporate dining,” said Spencer Cohn, who manages food and beverage for Durst. “The shift is not temporary.”

David Neil, a Durst principal, said several companies have made their leasing decisions based on a building’s food and beverage offerings.

In less flashy corners of corporate America, companies are struggling to find efficient ways to manage unpredicta­ble lunch crowds and reduce labor costs while still offering dining options. Streamline­d menus with QR codes are posted on walls, and orders are made on apps or at kiosks.

Some businesses have abandoned cafeterias altogether in favor of subsidizin­g food delivery. An app called Relish by ezcater aggregates a variety of restaurant orders from employees and delivers them all at the same time, in uniform packaging, so everyone can eat together. It uses a network of more than 104,000 restaurant­s in every state.

Stefania Mallett, the CEO of ezcater, said that companies she never thought would subsidize food for employees have signed up because it’s cheaper than running a cafeteria and satisfies younger workers, for whom food is becoming a requiremen­t rather than a perk.

New York ticket company Seatgeek uses the service regularly, she said. On days it offers subsidized lunch through the Relish app, five times as many employees come to the office.

“It’s much cheaper to give you a sandwich than replace a worker,” she said.

 ?? NICO SCHINCO / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? People play pool and card games inside The Green at the One Five One building in Manhattan in January. Spaces for rest and recreation were built into the remodel of what was once known as the Conde Nast building, at 151 West 42nd Street in Manhattan.
NICO SCHINCO / THE NEW YORK TIMES People play pool and card games inside The Green at the One Five One building in Manhattan in January. Spaces for rest and recreation were built into the remodel of what was once known as the Conde Nast building, at 151 West 42nd Street in Manhattan.

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