Monday, August 3, 2015

2 Caffe Bene locations coming to the East Village



Caffe Bene, the coffeehouse chain based in Seoul, South Korea, with nearly 20 locations planned for NYC, will be opening two outposts in the East Village in the months ahead.



The first location is on the southeast corner of Avenue A and East 13th Street (above).

This Caffe Bene is seeking a beer-wine license for the address, and reps will make their case during this month's CB3 SLA committee meeting on Aug. 17.

The previous longtime tenant, Kim's Laundromat & Cleaners, got rent-hiked out of here in July 2014. The new tenant will likely mean the end of Chico's tribute from 2009 to Eric "Taz" Pagan outside the laundromat. Pagan, 42, a bouncer at the former Forbidden City lounge on Avenue A, was shot and killed trying to break up a fight on Aug. 23, 2009. Pagan was not on duty at the time of the shooting.

---

The second Caffe Bene is coming to 24 St. Mark's Place between Third Avenue and Second Avenue … in the former Pinkberry space.



According to the Commercial Observer, who first reported on this deal, Caffe Bene signed a 10-year lease, with asking rent in the $240 per-square-foot territory.

The brokers told the Commercial Observer that the building's landlord, Beame Realty, "is looking to tap into the hedge funds and tech companies coming to 51 Astor Place, as well as the New York University and St. John’s University crowd."

The IBM Watson Building/Death Star at 51 Astor Place looms large over the block in more ways than one…

45 comments:

  1. coffee is so 2014.

    ReplyDelete
  2. There's already one on B'way btw. 11th and 12th.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The millennials will flock here with their finely tuned "chain-dar". This saddens me, I naively hoped for a local business which would employ people above minimum wage would take this spot. The global economy has overtaken the East Village.

    ReplyDelete
  4. One word: tacky!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Their website says, "Here, customers can enjoy their coffee". Not a word about booze, nor is any listed. So, since alcohol was not part of their original game plan in Korea, why is it here?

    ReplyDelete
  6. You will need to bring your hedge fund with you to afford these prices.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I was so excited when I started reading that a coffee shop was opening on 13th and A, then I got to the part where they are applying for a beer and wine license. We are saturated with bars around here. Can't we just have a nice, relaxed coffee shop?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I promise it'll be exactly that - a nice, relaxed coffee shop. I grew up in the neighborhood and family own several business here, I assure you I will keep the EV culture alive :)

      Delete
  8. There's another one opening at Union turnpike in queens as well.

    ReplyDelete
  9. OMG QUICK SOMEONE CALL THE 711 PROTESTERS A NEW CHAIN IS MOVING INTO THE AREA...!!! HURRY!!

    ReplyDelete
  10. Do they really think the people working in the Death Star would walk down St Marks? Venture out into a neighborhood and risk interacting with people? They'll be getting all their food through Seamless.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Here's a dare (also an honest question) for all you smart Grievers: Tell me, what is a hedge fund? I have no idea.

    ReplyDelete
  12. A hedge fund is "a mutual fund for the super rich..."
    Good explanation here:
    http://www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hedgefund.asp?partner=asksa

    ReplyDelete
  13. Did they mean hedge fun? We did that as kids. Double flips onto the neighbor's hedge, w/o breaking our limbs or getting impaled.

    Today you just lose your booty and apartment, and the flips are outrageously criminal

    ReplyDelete
  14. Caffe Bene caters TO the hedgefunders and trustfunders. Then again, most business that opens in East Village today! only caters to the hedgefunders and trustfunders.

    Like the neighborhood needs another coffee shop. I guess the newbie transplants would rather have coffee over laundromats or tailors. Oh wait, they have an app for those. So, all they have to do this touch a button in their iZombies and voila! their laundry and tailoring needs will be done while having having coffee.

    Most Caffe Bene outposts are owned only by Koreans and mostly hire Koreans or family members. This reminds me of the Korean delis who would only hire its own and when the African-American community threatened to sue them for not hiring minorities, aside from Koreans, the delis then started to hire Hispanics -- mostly Mexicans, Ecuadorian, and Guatemalans. They'll probably hire college students and the occasional minorities from The School of Chain Store agency now and then to comply with the EEOC.

    Caffé Bene came about when the CEO went to Canada and saw that the local coffee shops there were very popular and wanted to recreate the popularity of the mom-n-pop coffee shops and compete with Starbucks and Dunkin' Donuts mom-n-pop coffee shops. 2008 was a little too late to jump in the coffeehouse business, IMO. You already have Think Coffee, The Bean, Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf, Stumptown coffees, Cafe Grumpy, Joe Coffee, the Australian coffee shops, and the coffee shops whose caffeinologists wear trilbies, not to mention and esp. the "coffee shops" such as Box Kite.

    Caffé Bene has their eyes set with competing against Starbucks and Dunkin' Donuts that they are blind to the fact that there are other players out there. Also, Caffe Bene's pitch is that "it invites customers to linger in its vintage interior, which is modeled after traditional European coffee houses...and broadly international menu". Isn't this what most coffee shops are doing? And remember Tea Lounge? It also invited customers to linger, which in the end was the reason why they closed because they complained that Tea Lounge was not a community center. I'd like to see if the staff at Cafe Bene will be tolerant to those, esp. not white or attractive or female, who would linger and/or have Caffe Bene as laptopistan.

    The rapid expansion smells fishy to me; maybe part of its "international menu" or could just be a to wash money.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Dear smart 10:18 AM commenter, you could have asked Siri that or Googled it instead of wasting your precious time to have written your snide comment.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Hedge Fund - it's what people have at Bedford and Bowery.

    ReplyDelete
  17. ALL YOUR CAFE ARE BELONG TO US

    ReplyDelete
  18. 11:19 - Snide is obviously in the heart of the beholder.

    ReplyDelete
  19. 11:17

    Caffe Bene is just another coffee shop in South Korea. It appeals to the office worker and student more than the "hedgefunders and trustfunders."

    And do you honestly think a chain of South Korean coffee shops is moving to NYC in order to launder money?

    What is with (several/many) EVG commenters' weird anti-Asian vibe? It goes back several years. I don't get it.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Hedge Funds are a way for smart people to take the money of lazy rich people by charging high fees and underperforming relative to the market. Quite brilliant.

    ReplyDelete
  21. I've never heard of this company. I predict in five years we'll all be saying "where did all those Caffe Benes go?"

    ReplyDelete
  22. 12:55pm,

    Maybe it's because you haven't been to Seoul in the last decade?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @ 1:56 My point exactly. From famous in Seoul to how many instant locations in New York City? This city eats hubris like that for lunch. Just ask the Gap.

      Delete
  23. FYI, I tried the one on Broadway near 11th. I shoulda known it might not be great with a giant inflatable arch out front to announce the grand opening. It was hands down the worst coffee (Americano) I'd every had anywhere. I drank enough to choke down the crap bagel (I know, again, I shoulda known) and returned it to the counter, told them how bad it was. They offered to make me a double-shot, but I was done. Best coffee near me (7th & First) is at Fresco on 2nd Ave between St. Marks & 9th.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Gojira brings up a good point, why do these guys need a liquor license in New York when they don't in Seoul?

    ReplyDelete
  25. Anonymous 2:53, Why does McDonald's not sell beer in the U.S. but it does in Germany? Not everything is as cookie-cutter as it's made out to be.

    I look forward to their opening on St. Mark's. I miss the Pinkberry that was there.

    ReplyDelete
  26. If there's an anti-asian vibe around it's because Asians are one of the last ethnic groups of which it is not yet taboo to ridicule in polite American society. Mainstream media still does it all the time, and most people unless they know better just follow mainstream media's lead. Whether they realize it or not.

    ReplyDelete
  27. And for "Best Butcher" I vote for Josef Stalin ..August 3, 2015 at 4:29 PM

    Noting first that this is a South Korean coffee shop chain ...

    While there is certainly an undercurrent of anti-Asian sentiment in places (e.g., Chinese manufactured goods are claimed to be inferior to domestic, so blame China instead of the US corporations that outsource everything to China to save money), probably nobody bashes Asians more than the Fearless Leader of North Korea:

    Indonesia awards North Korea leader Kim Jong Un prize for global statesmanship

    http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/indonesia-awards-kim-jong-prize-global-statesmanship-article-1.2312233

    The article notes: " Previous winners of the prize include Gandhi."

    ReplyDelete
  28. Contributor's to EV Grieve seem to know a lot about everyone in the neighborhood. They are either hedgefunders or trustfund babies. I suppose this knowledge comes from hours and hours spent in the plethora of coffee shops that now populate the East Village--those coffee shops that open at 7 or 7:30 AM and are very quickly filled with people working on their laptops (is everyone in the East Village writing a screenplay? or is everyone in the work at home economy and getting out of their apartments to work somewhere else?). The knee jerk reaction on this site seems to be attack NYU students, attack "frat" boys or "sorority" girls. Now we've moved on to include Hegefunders, St. Johns University students, and trustfund babies. My my!!! Would someone mind starting a thread in which they declare who is welcome in the neighborhood??? Setting out with clarity what sort of people are going to be acceptable and the background of those who are setting the criteria. There are lots of issues in the East Village but the recurrent response of blame it [whatever that it might be]on--this group or that group is getting tiresome. I am surprised that no one accused this coffee chain of having ties to the Rev. Moon--perhaps it does.

    ReplyDelete
  29. Applying for a liquor license shows they did zero research on the neighborhood because they are clearly unaware that the residents of upper Avenue A and the side streets are fed up with all the bars and all the noise from the bars. Why not just operate a coffee shop like they do elsewhere? I am happy to patronize a place that doesn't serve booze. Seriously, if I want a drink in the East Village, I have no shortage of options!

    ReplyDelete
  30. The reason they need a liquor license in NY but not in Korea is that NY is a socialist state, unlike Korea, at least S. Korea. That's why it's Havana on the Hudson.
    CB has two other cafes, one on the corner of 49th and Broadway, and one on the corner of 27th and 7th. Both are two story cafes, which is cool.

    Bill

    ReplyDelete
  31. anon @5:37 that's because the douchebags/fratboys/entitled suburban twits are one in the same. Don't be an idiot.

    ReplyDelete
  32. one of these was under construction on 23rd st for 6 months, opened, and shut down 4 months later. seriously overpriced, mediocre selection.

    ReplyDelete
  33. First we had Korean delis on every corner; then we had phone stores on every corner, then banks/drugstores/juice places on every corner, and now coffee shops on every corner gaining rapidly. My question is: What business will come along after the coffee-on-every-corner market is saturated?

    ReplyDelete
  34. There is a new artisanal coffee place opening in a tiny
    store front on 5th St between 2nd and 3rd. It feels like there is a new coffee entrepreneur on every block. Ralph Lauren is opening a coffee cafe in the new shop on 5th Ave (out of the nabe, but shows the trend).. We're already getting over-run with "artisanal" ice cream/gelatto (several of which have opened and closed quickly) and juice bars. What is there left? More empty store fronts in a few months....

    ReplyDelete
  35. Oh! And the new coffee spot is occupying what was previously an apt broker's office. Guess they got pushed out of business by the big boys that have taken over the EV.

    ReplyDelete
  36. Globalization is the worst. Those are ten coffee shop franchises that could be ten independent coffee shops for New Yorkers. Seriously, fuck off Seoul businessmen. (and PS, there are FIVE coffee shops/cafes on my block).

    ReplyDelete
  37. @7:21pm: You're right! I left out fro-yo places on every block. Still wondering what comes next ... after everyone is hyper-caffeinated.

    ReplyDelete
  38. I think mini dance halls (24 hr., no booze) in the vacant spaces would work wonders for the hyper-caffeinated.

    You could have a variety of music! C'mon, you'd go.

    ReplyDelete
  39. It's kind of like a Dunkin' Donuts, but with a lot of green tea and red bean flavored stuff.

    ReplyDelete
  40. If they would drop their pursuit of a beer and wine license, I would patronize the place.

    ReplyDelete
  41. won't last more than six months---the caffeebene franchise shutters places as quickly as they open them--too bad for the poor schmuck who is going to open here.....

    ReplyDelete
  42. As much as I am sick of the chemical warfare being perpetrated against us via alcohol, when I lived in San Fransicko in the early 90's most of the cafes there served beer and wine, as well as tasty food. I would imagine much of the SF cafe scene has been destroyed by its rentier commercial real estate culture. The coffee out there was much better than that served here. i got bored with the weather.

    ReplyDelete

Your remarks and lively debates are welcome, whether supportive or critical of the views herein. Your articulate, well-informed remarks that are relevant to an article are welcome.

However, commentary that is intended to "flame" or attack, that contains violence, racist comments and potential libel will not be published. Facts are helpful.

If you'd like to make personal attacks and libelous claims against people and businesses, then you may do so on your own social media accounts. Also, comments predicting when a new business will close ("I give it six weeks") will not be approved.