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Go Back   SkyscraperPage Forum > Regional Sections > Canada > Ontario > SSP: Local Hamilton > Culture, Dining, Sports & Recreation

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  #581  
Old Posted: Jul 17, 2012, 4:02 PM
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Dining at the Discovery Centre

I thought there might have been a thread for this but I couldn't find it so I'm stickin' it here.

Those restaurants that are going in down at Pier 8 are starting to come along nicely. Actually, I was really impressed with what I saw and I don't think there's any doubt they'll be jammed day and night. Here are a few pics:











I didn't take any pics of Williams but its expansion also appears to be nearing an end.
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  #582  
Old Posted: Jul 17, 2012, 5:04 PM
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Wow, that looks really nice. Is there any estimate for opening date?
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  #583  
Old Posted: Jul 17, 2012, 6:17 PM
northender98 northender98 is offline
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Originally Posted by mattgrande View Post
Wow, that looks really nice. Is there any estimate for opening date?
The opening date is August 1st. Their website is up at http://www.sarcoa.ca/
Northender
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  #584  
Old Posted: Jul 17, 2012, 6:17 PM
CaptainKirk CaptainKirk is offline
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Is there any estimate for opening date?
Dunno, but they're taking online reservations is two weeks.

http://www.sarcoa.ca/reservations.php
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  #585  
Old Posted: Jul 17, 2012, 9:21 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mattgrande View Post
Wow, that looks really nice. Is there any estimate for opening date?
It looks much better in person. Those banquettes give the place a bit of a resort-y feel. The views will be amazing. It's gonna be a real hot ticket I think.

Also, I'm not 100% sure but I think there will be two additional restaurants aside from Sarcoa. Perhaps some slightly cheaper options.

That area is really coming together. All we need to do now is get the Port Authority to sell the rest of the pier so it can be properly developed. They're not too thrilled about that idea, though.
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  #586  
Old Posted: Aug 16, 2012, 12:25 PM
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Twitter-based rumour time!

Someone pointed me to https://twitter.com/AnchorBar_ca, which has this as a description:

Quote:
ANCHOR BAR! Home of the ORIGINAL BUFFALO CHICKEN WING is COMING TO HAMILTON, ONTARIO, CANADA!
They haven't tweeted anything yet, but according to WhenDidYouJoinTwitter.com, the account was only created two days ago.
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  #587  
Old Posted: Aug 16, 2012, 1:52 PM
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If that's true the place will be packed.
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  #588  
Old Posted: Aug 17, 2012, 1:39 PM
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Does anyone have any idea when Burrito Boyz will be opening?
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  #589  
Old Posted: Aug 17, 2012, 2:00 PM
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Burrito Boyz will be good to get some late night traffic into the Gore area. I love their Burritos.

I wonder if that Wing Place is the restaurant that is opening at King+Bay where the Hooters speculation was.
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  #590  
Old Posted: Aug 18, 2012, 2:14 PM
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RESTAURANT REVIVAL: More eating options on the menu

http://www.thespec.com/news/business...ns-on-the-menu

Restaurateur Tim Yee had faith in the downtown and James North in particular long before most saw potential.

Now, the 30-something entrepreneur who owns Chinese food restaurant Harvest Moon is taking another leap of faith, this time in what some may consider an even tougher spot: King Street East in the core.

He bought the building at 103 King St. E. — the former Joe Buttinsky's wing spot across from the shuttered Royal Connaught. It is being transformed into two restaurants and a dance club.

“It's what you want in a good city, places to walk to on a nice day,” said Yee. “There are tons of people who walk by the building every day. We don't want to be a city of bingo halls and dollar stores and vacant buildings.”

Yee's initiative is being matched by other optimistic restaurateurs, including an ambitious project to transform the former Philthy McNasty's site on Upper James into a Japanese eatery.

In July, there were four building permits issued by the city for alterations to small restaurants in key urban areas of the city including the downtown — part of a recent uptick in restaurant renos, says the city's urban renewal manager Glen Norton.

“I think that people are just seeing more traffic downtown. It's been a lot more vibrant. Maybe now they're making a bit more money so they can put in a new fryer or make a small addition. Our employment numbers are up and our survey shows the downtown population grew by about 320 people,” he said.

“It's not all great, not by a long shot, but it's a journey.

“The encouraging thing is that a lot of these renovations or new restaurants are a bit more upscale.”

Yee has partnered with another entrepreneur, Bright Kyereme, who plans to open at the former Joe Buttinsky's site by Halloween.

Kyereme said the new concept will include an Irish pub in the basement level named The Cap after the Capitol Theatre, which was the original purpose of the building. The second level will be a more formal restaurant called The Reel, after the old movie reels. The third floor will be a lounge/dance bar area.

Kyereme said he's still waiting to get city approvals for the third floor and for his liquor licence.

He said the second floor was in rough condition but the top and bottom floors were only in need of some minor repairs and cleaning up. All the renovations will be done with a goal of restoring the building, peeling back the more recent layers to expose the beautiful brick walls, and letting the building's structure act as the main design element.

“We will be preserving all of the original architecture, cleaning it up and replacing the old staircase with a glassed-in stair case with all glass along the front so people driving by on King can see what's going on.”

Because ultimately, for a second time, Yee was lured by the architecture and the potential he sees in its location.

Yee moved from Toronto to Hamilton in 2004 and opened Harvest Moon, at 80 James St. N., after falling in love with the building's architecture.

It hasn't been easy — the first years were tough, like the neighbourhood in those days.

“Sometimes I had to throw people out who just wandered in. It was horrible. It's a lot better now,” he said.

Still, Harvest Moon became a destination, drawing customers from all over the city.

“This was an old theatre. I like unique buildings, you just can't buy these kinds of interesting old brick walls and features in a new building,” said Yee. “Since the (2008 recession), a lot of buildings turned over in ownership on the street and it seemed as if the old owners were just holding on, but the new owners they want to do something with these buildings.”

The moderate increase in restaurant activity in Hamilton is mirrored in a restaurateur outlook survey conducted by the Canadian Restaurant and Food Services Association released in July which found 40 per cent of restaurant owners were guardedly optimistic about growth potential in the last six months of 2012.

That was up slightly from 38 per cent in the first quarter and a subdued 22 per cent in Q4 of 2011.

Aside from the downtown, several other pockets of the city are also seeing an increase in new restaurant openings, such as Stoney Creek (look for a new Kelsey's on Queenston Road) and on the Mountain.

Anna Huang is in the midst of breathing new life into the 12,000-square-foot space which once housed Philthy McNasty's at 1441 Upper James.

Huang plans to open an all-you-can-eat Japanese restaurant called Chihiro in the early fall.

The restaurant bears little resemblance to the former sports bar. Huang has installed stunning tile and glass work she custom ordered and shipped from her native China, including a dramatic white glass sketch of a geisha welcoming visitors at the front entrance.

“I chose Hamilton because there's nothing like this here and I really love the location on Upper James,” she said.

Yee is pleased to see the competition increase among the city's menu of restaurants.

“(Competition) is an excellent thing,” he said. “We want to see a lot of different restaurants. That's what makes a downtown exciting, interesting places to visit.”
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  #591  
Old Posted: Aug 18, 2012, 7:13 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mattgrande View Post
Does anyone have any idea when Burrito Boyz will be opening?
http://www.thespec.com/news/business...ns-on-the-menu

Quote:
Burrito Boyz, is opening at 66 King St. E. expected sometime this fall
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  #592  
Old Posted: Aug 18, 2012, 7:25 PM
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Last edited by Pigeon; Aug 19, 2012 at 3:42 AM.
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  #593  
Old Posted: Aug 19, 2012, 1:27 AM
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^I'm afraid you're going to have to expand upon that. Don't just leave it dangling...
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  #594  
Old Posted: Aug 19, 2012, 2:25 AM
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Originally Posted by Pigeon View Post
The new owner of the Capitol Bar...

http://peel.library.ualberta.ca/news.../Img/Pg006.pdf

This guy also owns "Jerk and Suya" on King William. I don't think they've been open to the public a day since taking occupancy a few months ago. The Capitol will be a prime example of cash deals, and city grant exploitation.
that link is to a newspaper article about police breaking up a party in Windsor.
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  #595  
Old Posted: Aug 19, 2012, 3:03 AM
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Last edited by Pigeon; Aug 19, 2012 at 3:41 AM.
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  #596  
Old Posted: Aug 19, 2012, 5:09 AM
CaptainKirk CaptainKirk is offline
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that link is to a newspaper article about police breaking up a party in Windsor.

The last thirds or so of the article refers to Bright Kyereme, who is co-owner of he proposed 103 King Sst E restaurants/bar
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  #597  
Old Posted: Aug 22, 2012, 12:24 PM
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Looks like there's a peanut butter food truck.

http://yfrog.com/z/esrdcuuj

Last edited by SteelTown; Aug 22, 2012 at 12:59 PM.
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  #598  
Old Posted: Aug 22, 2012, 7:16 PM
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I posted about this on the "135 King St E | ? | 5fl | Proposed" page (here is the link to that
page http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/show...91#post5807091), but I figured since it is
about food I would quote it from that page so I can post it here too.

Quote:
Originally Posted by MeIsThomas View Post
Went for a walk last night and got a picture of the sign out front of the Stoney Creek Dairy.
It was dark and my flash on my phone wouldn't work so the picture isn't that clear. If you
can't read it it says:

"AS OF SEPT 3 MOVING TO: 325 BAY ST HAMILTON"

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  #599  
Old Posted: Aug 23, 2012, 1:21 PM
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Paul Wilson: Buffalo's Anchor Bar wings it to downtown Hamilton

http://www.cbc.ca/hamilton/talk/stor...nchor-bar.html

Sure, it was great to hear last week that a supermarket will open downtown next spring.

But when it comes to food in the core, here’s the really big, deep-fried news — Buffalo’s legendary Anchor Bar is pushing over the border into Ontario, and the first location in the province will be in the heart of Hamilton.

There seems little argument that the chicken wing was indeed born at the Anchor Bar, Main Street at North in Buffalo. Teressa and Frank Bellissimo opened the doors in 1935. But it was nearly 30 years later — a Friday night in 1964 — that Teressa stumbled upon the new miracle food.

Normally, the chicken wing went into the stock pot for soup. But that night she dumped some wings into the fryer, coated them with a secret sauce and served them with celery and blue cheese dip.

Thousand pounds a day
Now the Anchor serves a thousand pounds of wings a day — mild, medium, hot, spicy and, at a premium, suicidal — to movie stars, big-name athletes and lots of us from Ontario. The Anchor ships its wings too, but Hamilton won’t need FedEx for a feast.

Work starts soon on the restaurant here. Location, Jackson Square. Target for opening, late November.

Dave Copperthwaite has been in the restaurant business 30 years. A recent project was Entertainment Central at Dundas and Trafalgar Road in Oakville, which includes the Wendell Clark Classic Grill & Sports Lounge. Copperthwaite is also a trained chef, and once cooked for the Queen.

'The money starts flowing in, the bad reputation starts flowing out.'
—Dave Copperthwaite, on bringing Anchor Bar to downtown Hamilton
His group has secured the Ontario rights for Anchor Bar. They knew right away they should plant the first flag in downtown Hamilton.

"It’s a growing concern, growing by leaps and bounds," he says. "They’re cleaning it up. There’s the new McMaster building, Copps Coliseum, condos being built, hotels being built…

"I think it’s a no-brainer. It’s the old thing — the money starts flowing in, the bad reputation starts flowing out."

Just like Buffalo wings
The Hamilton wings will be exactly like the Buffalo wings, Copperthwaite says. The restaurant will have a wood-burning pizza oven and they will "Canadianize" parts of the menu — more healthy options, more fresh salads.

But there is so much history on the walls in that sprawling brick building in Buffalo. Diners know the wing was born right here. It’s a visit to Mecca, and you can buy the T-shirt. However Copperthwaite says they’re ready to spend up to $1 million to make the Hamilton location feel just right.

A couple of years ago, another party did try to import the Anchor name to Rochester. It didn’t work.

"They had their own way of doing things there," says Ivano Toscani, general manager and executive chef of the Buffalo Anchor operation.

This expansion, he says, was proposed to them by the Ontario interests. "If they copy us, if they do exactly like we do, it will work."

Paul.Wilson@cbc.ca | @PaulWilsonCBC

Read more CBC Hamilton stories by Paul Wilson.
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  #600  
Old Posted: Nov 19, 2012, 2:41 PM
markbarbera markbarbera is offline
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While out and about over the weekend, I noticed that Tony Roma's on Queenston Road has closed. Out front of the restaurant was a sign that said "Returning Spring 2013: Mother's Pizza Parlour and Spaghetti House"
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