Tag: cafe

  • Stay With Us: The Community-Led Cafe

    Stay With Us: The Community-Led Cafe

    Have you ever been in a coffee shop and thought you could make it better? That is exactly what Steven Harris thought before he opened Stay With Us cafe in 2022. A dream project that became reality after Harris was advised to have another income on the side, as his job was only a 6-month contract work in sports. Stay With Us has grown its own community in the small space it occupies just down the road from St. Peter’s Church in Phibsborough.

    Harris said working as a barista was what inspired him to open his own business. He had saved up money and started looking for a place to open. “I say to people [I did] not [have] enough to buy a house but enough to start a business,” he said.  Harris said he did not intentionally choose Phibsborough; it just happened to have a unit that was the size he wanted and within the price range he was looking for.

    Harris and his friend did all the labour to make sure the unit was up and ready for business in just 6 short weeks. When asked about the quick turnaround, he explained how not having to wait on any tradesmen meant they could work quickly. Though Harris did not have a background in construction, he said he was lucky to have some DIY knowledge and had the advantage of asking people he knew for some help; he also relied on some YouTube tutorials. He said because they were doing the work for free at the start it “gave the business a kickstart off the bat without having a lot of outgoings.”

    Hot chocolate bought in Stay With Us, latte art creating a swan on top. Photo credit: Zita Fox

    When asked about the possibility of expanding the Stay With Us brand, Harris informed The City that he already has another cafe in Dublin. Opened on the 31st of May and located in Temple Bar, Mantle, is more of a premium specialty coffee product, as opposed to the more community -oriented cafe in Phibsborough. Harris wanted to open something new rather than opening a replica; he wanted it to be the polar opposite to what he already owned. “I find when people expand out or change, for example, you kind of lose that personal touch of the area,” he said.  

    Harris is a physiotherapist for the NHS in Scotland for most of the year. That is where he got the idea to have multiple different establishments.  There is a man in Edinburgh who owns around 12 coffee shops, but they all have different names and none of them are related to each other. He goes on to say that they are a similar fit if you know what to look for then of course, you would realise it is the same person who owns them all.

    Harris points out how all those cafes have their own little communities, workers, and regulars and how he too wanted to have that broad appeal. He said having the different brands to market makes it far more interesting for himself: “everything’s just slightly different and a bit fresher.”

    Stay With Us continues to pull people in with its charm. Full of treats and drinks, mainly coffee, the cafe has created a small, safe bubble in the centre of Dublin. Whether you go in when it is lashing rain, morning time, or the last order of the day, you will be greeted with some of the most welcoming staff around. For now, it seems that Harris is happy with just the two cafes, but who knows what the future holds.

  • If you build it, they will come… Eventually

    If you build it, they will come… Eventually

    Lavanda (left) and V-Face (right) on Lower Grangegorman Road. Photo by Colm McGuirk

    “The fact that this unit was close to TU Dublin was a huge factor in the decision to go ahead with it.” Sarah Boland, owner of V-Face, is talking about her vegan fast-food restaurant’s proximity to the impressive new home of Technological University (TU) Dublin.

    The city campus of what used to be called DIT, built as the centrepiece of a major regeneration programme for Grangegorman in north Dublin city, is ready to welcome around 10,000 students plus staff – once Covid restrictions are no longer necessary. 

    Boland’s is among a number of independent businesses on the Lower Grangegorman Road that had factored those numbers into their plans. 

    “It’s going to be a huge campus, so obviously footfall will increase massively,” Boland says. 

    In the turbulent 10 months since it opened, V-Face has had to make some think-on-your-feet adjustments to compensate for lost bums on its 40 seats. Among them is the outdoor eating area installed on the opposite corner, in cooperation with Dublin City Council, and the window hatch through which Boland speaks to The City

    “Coffee and sandwiches were never in the business model,” Boland says, “but we said ‘let’s bring out a lunch offering.’ The burgers were doing really well, but were more for the evening offering. [The hatch and coffee counter] have been designed in a way that, once the pandemic is gone, you can also swing around and serve people that come in.”

    Dining tables installed by V-Face. Photo by Colm McGuirk

    While V-Face benefitted from a model partly geared towards takeaway from the off, former Mediterranean restaurant Lavanda on the opposite corner has had to reset completely in the last year. 

    “We tried to do takeaway Mediterranean food during the first wave,” says Croatian owner Robert Velic, “but it didn’t work very well.”

    Lavanda’s enforced rebirth was planned with the new TU Dublin campus in mind – it now sells toasties, slices of pizza and sweet treats.  

    “We’ll see when the students come back if we made the right choice”

    Robert Velic

    “The second wave came and then we completely changed. We were expecting those students. We adapted the prices to four or five euro,” Velic says.

    “When the lockdown ends,” he continues, “it’s going to be a proper takeaway and we can add a few more things to the menu when business picks up and the colleges are back. We’ll continue to target students and walk-ins. We’ll see when the students come back if we made the right choice.”

    A few doors up, Russia native Alexander Yegorov’s print and copy shop should be bustling. 

    His unit is next door to one of two new student apartment complexes on this stretch of road built in the controversial ‘co-living’ mould (and, in the ultimate symbol of the area’s gentrification, on the site of the former ‘Squat City’).

    “We opened our shop three months ago,” Yegorov tells us. “They move the lockdown every two months. I expected the students would be here from the new year. But now, it won’t be until summer time. 

    “But it’s OK,” Yegorov adds. “We can survive until summer.”

    “We knew it was a long game, but it’s been a lot longer than anticipated”

    Rebecca Feely

    On the next corner, Rebecca Feely of Kale+Coco tells The City that when she chose the location for her plant-based healthy food cafe in 2019, “it was under the assumption that there’d be lots of students.”

    “We knew it was a bit of a long game,” Feely says, “because they were moving students bit by bit. But it’s been a lot longer than anticipated.”

    While noting that her prices might be a little above the average student’s range, she tells us, “it’s always been in my head to focus more on marketing to students, but I haven’t had the chance yet because we haven’t had the students there yet.”

    Kale+Coco has leaned more towards retail of food products to help stay afloat in what has been a difficult year.

    Rebecca Feely in her cafe Kale+Coco. Photo by Colm McGuirk

    “We were never actually told to close, so you feel almost obligated to keep trading because you have bills to pay,” Feely says. 

    “You have rent due. If you’re not ordered by the government to close, you’re not covered by any insurance, your landlords aren’t going to give you a break,” she adds.

    While the eventual arrival of students should help jump-start these Lower Grangegorman businesses, it could well signal the end for Happy Days Coffee Van on the new campus a little further up the road. 

    The mobile cafe was set up by local resident Olivia O’Flanagan in response to the “inertia and isolation” her neighbours were faced with during the first lockdown last spring. 

    O’Flanagan, a former lecturer with no background in business, was given the green light to operate on TU Dublin’s campus for as long as its own catering services were closed. 

    “It’s a lockdown project to keep us all busy and connected and give some kind of focus for the local community,” she tells The City.

    Happy Days Coffee Van set up at the entrance of TU Dublin’s Grangegorman Campus. Photo by Colm McGuirk

    Hiring only locals helped her secure the temporary contract – staff can return to their own homes for the mandatory bathroom access.

    “For me, it’s not a business endeavour,” O’Flanagan says, “though it has made money and is paying eight people’s wages on 20 hours a week. They’re all delighted and their parents are saying they were all sitting in their bedrooms cracking up.”

  • How local cafes are coping with Level 3 restrictions

    How local cafes are coping with Level 3 restrictions

    Dhai Almutairi checked on the local cafe to see how they are managing with Level 3 restrictions in place.

    Photo by Monika Pienkos.

    The government announced last week that all counties will join Dublin and Donegal in Level 3 of the Living with Covid-19 plan for the next three weeks.

    Indoor dining in pubs, cafes, and restaurants is banned across Ireland under Level 3 restrictions. Serving food can remain open for takeaway, delivery, and outdoor dining only. Outdoor dining is allowed outside bars, restaurants, cafes with a maximum of 15 customers. This limitation is an effective closure order for many struggling businesses.

    Many businesses wouldn’t be able to survive with public health limits of 15 customers given that winter is approaching, and the Irish climate doesn’t help to provide outdoor dining for customers. 

    The Restaurants Association of Ireland (RAI) stated  Level 3 restrictions with outdoor dining would mean that staying open was unfeasible for many restaurants. 

    The Social Fabric Café is a local café located in the heart of Stoneybatter, Dublin 7. The cafe took over an old post office and transformed it into a local spot for healthy, delicious food and coffee.

    Before the initial lockdown in March, the café closed its doors as there was a decline in the number of customers coming in. The café remained closed for six weeks then reopened following government advice for takeaway only.

    Social Fabric Cafe in Dublin city centre. Photo by Miguel Ruiz.

    “We noticed coffee sales increase, and that made 75% of our revenue,” said Monika Pienkos, the café’s owner. “Some of our regular customers started asking for food, so we prepared a small menu for takeaway. 

    “We started to look into click and collect stores, and we advertised takeaway services.”

    Despite their effort in running the cafe smoothly, the café was forced to lay off all its employees. “The owners worked the hours to minimize the costs,” they explained. “We managed to cover our costs and maintained a regular customer base”, said Pienkos.

    With the introduction of Level 3 restriction, the café reported a continued decline in its customers and revenue. “We don’t have an outside sitting area, and the weather is changing now, so we are considering to be open for five days a week.”

    Running a café during a global pandemic means adapting to survive amid the COVID-19 restrictions.  

    The Social Fabric Café made more call and collect order ads and created an online click and collect shop in order to maximise their reach. “We introduced wearing masks at all times, supplied three sanitizing stations, and made strict cleaning and sanitizing procedures,” Pienkos explained.

    Business owners and customers alike have been debating whether the closure of indoor dining is going to lower the number of COVID cases in Ireland. 

    “We are not sure if closing indoor dining is making a significant difference,” Pienkos said. “Our indoor dining was reorganized to adhere to all social destining regulations, and we operated on a half capacity basis.”

    The Social Fabric Café recently obtained a Covid-19 safety certificate from Failte Ireland and is doing all they can and need to keep their place and customers safe.

  • Bread 41: meeting the knead for sustainability

    Bread 41: meeting the knead for sustainability

    By Jade Carpenter and Paula Bowden

    Located at 41 Pearse Street, Bread 41 is a cafe and bakery striving for sustainability. From their commitment to no single use cups on Mondays, to the ingredients and produce in their kitchen, sustainability is always a priority.

    Thecity.ie spoke to owner Eoin Cluskey about going green and future plans for the business.