ronnie_suburban wrote:Wow . . . what a disappointment. All that PR build-up about a second location and it ends up being less than 2.5 miles away from location #1. How utterly convenient.
crrush wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:Wow . . . what a disappointment. All that PR build-up about a second location and it ends up being less than 2.5 miles away from location #1. How utterly convenient.
Sorry, man, but as a Pilsen-ite, I'm stoked. What with the Whole Foods on Roosevelt/Canal (if it ever opens up) and now Fox&Obel just blocks away...my food budget will get blown out, but it'll be a happy day for we of the south-ish side.
ronnie_suburban wrote:LOL, no worries. I understand what you're saying and I'm happy for you. But seriously (no snark intended at all), is the original location so far away that it's off your radar? And more rhetorically, will this location really draw that many new customers, or will it just siphon off current customers from the original location?
=R=
ronnie_suburban wrote:But seriously (no snark intended at all), is the original location so far away that it's off your radar? And more rhetorically, will this location really draw that many new customers, or will it just siphon off current customers from the original location?
Dish wrote:Vulpes, LLC, a group of locally based investors led by the food retail veteran Bill Bolton, has agreed to purchase Fox & Obel (401 E. Illinois St.; 312-410-7301), Chicago’s leading gourmet food shop. The name will not change, nor will the people involved, but according to Fox & Obel’s president and CEO, Keith Montague, the deal leverages F & O’s longtime plan: expansion. “For a long time we have wanted to build additional stores and go to other areas,” Montague told us. “River North, South Loop, North Shore: all tremendous areas. Naperville, Oak Park. We are a small company and don’t have the luxury of opening sites that won’t be successful, so we want to be careful to do it right.” The deal, whose financial terms were not made public, is scheduled to close at the end of January.
Sam Harmon wrote:I too am very puzzled at the South Loop. Lincoln Park/Lakeview seems like such a more logical choice for numerous reasons.
Being a LP'r who doesn't drive, I don't go to the Streeterville location for the reasons mentioned above. Given this locations very easy Red Line access, I probably will make it down there far more than I did to E. Illinois.
BR wrote:As for what new investors bring to the table, I'm guessing they invested because they like the niche that the F&O people found lacking in Chicago, and realize that for F&O to succeed, they must continue to nail down that particular segment ....
stevez wrote:BR wrote:As for what new investors bring to the table, I'm guessing they invested because they like the niche that the F&O people found lacking in Chicago, and realize that for F&O to succeed, they must continue to nail down that particular segment ....
The tone of the press release was that mostly they brought money to the table. The former owner was quoted as saying that they had wanted to expand for quite some time but didn't have the money or management firepower to pull it off.
BR wrote:I'm not the least bit puzzled -- take a drive around the South Loop and check out all of the new housing. I suppose that's what Whole Foods, Sam's, Binny's, etc. all noticed. The area is booming, and doing so in a somewhat condensed area.
SMT wrote: The South Loop is now rapidly expanding as it becomes home to more and more upwardly mobile types, and it has the added benefit of not being nearly as over-crowded as the Lincoln Park/Clybourn Corridor mess.