Panther in the Den wrote:I did a drive by yesterday and while I cannot say anything they might be closed for a short while (fingers crossed).
Suzy Creamcheese wrote:The most exciting thing about the experience for me was that they have a PHONE BOOTH in the restaurant. A phone booth! Did you even know those still existed?!
Katie wrote:Suzy Creamcheese wrote:The most exciting thing about the experience for me was that they have a PHONE BOOTH in the restaurant. A phone booth! Did you even know those still existed?!
That reminds me of the Phone Box Pub in Santiago, Chile. The entrance is an old red English phone booth. There's a nice photo on this page.
spinynorman99 wrote:Katie wrote:
Also brings to mind the ultra-gimmicky Safe House in Milwaukee. Sort of cool to an 19-year old in the 70's, probably less so today, if it's even still open.
ronnie_suburban wrote:KajmacJohnson wrote:Again, I am going to repeat what I was trying to say above. Why do new owners of buildings feel they need to fix things by kicking out longtime establishments that are apart of the nieghborhood fabric? It never makes any sense.
OTOH, not many folks invest money to fulfill someone else's (business) vision. It sucks that Ramova is closing -- I happen to really like the place -- but such is life. Couldn't they relocate? It seems like space in the area is abundant and it's still very much a renters'/buyers' market.
=R=
PortPkPaul wrote:Sometimes "evictions" are really that the rent is being raised more than the tenant is willing to accept and it thinks it is cheaper to relocate. I have seen signs that say "lost our lease" but then nothing new comes in for years so it's not like the landlord had a more desirable tenant lined up.
This has been happening a lot in our neighborhood. One national business chain comes in and pays an over-market rate, and suddenly all the landlords think they can get that amount from small, local, one-person businesses. They'll raise the rent, figuring they can also get a national chain, and the space goes empty for months or years.
DMChicago wrote:CAFE BERNARD IS TEMPORARILY CLOSED FOR RENOVATION
Drove by last night and saw the windows covered with paper.
Walked in here for dinner a few weeks ago and walked right back out.
Too dark, too musky, too empty.
Time for a change, indeed!
Cafe Bernard
2100 North Halsted Street
Chicago, IL 60614
spinynorman99 wrote:Does anyone have an example where a "Closed for Renovations" sign actually meant that the restaurant was renovating and reopening?
spinynorman99 wrote:DMChicago wrote:CAFE BERNARD IS TEMPORARILY CLOSED FOR RENOVATION
Drove by last night and saw the windows covered with paper.
Walked in here for dinner a few weeks ago and walked right back out.
Too dark, too musky, too empty.
Time for a change, indeed!
Cafe Bernard
2100 North Halsted Street
Chicago, IL 60614
Does anyone have an example where a "Closed for Renovations" sign actually meant that the restaurant was renovating and reopening?
Pie Lady wrote:spinynorman99 wrote:DMChicago wrote:CAFE BERNARD IS TEMPORARILY CLOSED FOR RENOVATION
Drove by last night and saw the windows covered with paper.
Walked in here for dinner a few weeks ago and walked right back out.
Too dark, too musky, too empty.
Time for a change, indeed!
Cafe Bernard
2100 North Halsted Street
Chicago, IL 60614
Does anyone have an example where a "Closed for Renovations" sign actually meant that the restaurant was renovating and reopening?
I always wondered why they bother saying they're coming back when they know they're not.
Pie Lady wrote:I always wondered why they bother saying they're coming back when they know they're not.
spinynorman99 wrote:DMChicago wrote:CAFE BERNARD IS TEMPORARILY CLOSED FOR RENOVATION
Drove by last night and saw the windows covered with paper.
Walked in here for dinner a few weeks ago and walked right back out.
Too dark, too musky, too empty.
Time for a change, indeed!
Cafe Bernard
2100 North Halsted Street
Chicago, IL 60614
Does anyone have an example where a "Closed for Renovations" sign actually meant that the restaurant was renovating and reopening?
Suzy Creamcheese wrote:A new dog place, right in my hood. I'd be more excited about this if I was particularly a hot dog fan. However, they do offer corn fritters as a side option, so that's exciting.
Zebra's Gourmet Hot Dogs
3551 S Halsted
773-940-1526
chgoeditor wrote:spinynorman99 wrote:DMChicago wrote:CAFE BERNARD IS TEMPORARILY CLOSED FOR RENOVATION
Drove by last night and saw the windows covered with paper.
Walked in here for dinner a few weeks ago and walked right back out.
Too dark, too musky, too empty.
Time for a change, indeed!
Cafe Bernard
2100 North Halsted Street
Chicago, IL 60614
Does anyone have an example where a "Closed for Renovations" sign actually meant that the restaurant was renovating and reopening?
Several years ago, Ecce in Lakeview "closed for remodeling" and then did, in fact, reopen with a new interior and new name (Kanok) but the same menu and much of the same staff.
Pasteur in Uptown closed for remodeling for several years and just reopened recently.
But, yeah, remodeling is usually the euphemism for "we're out of here!"
spinynorman99 wrote:DMChicago wrote:CAFE BERNARD IS TEMPORARILY CLOSED FOR RENOVATION
Drove by last night and saw the windows covered with paper.
Walked in here for dinner a few weeks ago and walked right back out.
Too dark, too musky, too empty.
Time for a change, indeed!
Cafe Bernard
2100 North Halsted Street
Chicago, IL 60614
Does anyone have an example where a "Closed for Renovations" sign actually meant that the restaurant was renovating and reopening?
JoelF wrote:Eva Luna wrote:The Keg in Evanston has closed, after having its liquor liense revoked:
The Trib confirms
Ursiform wrote:Suzy Creamcheese wrote:A new dog place, right in my hood. I'd be more excited about this if I was particularly a hot dog fan. However, they do offer corn fritters as a side option, so that's exciting.
Zebra's Gourmet Hot Dogs
3551 S Halsted
773-940-1526
I totally missed this opening, their menu is pretty interesting, Nathan's hot dogs instead of Vienna Beef and ham carved off the bone. Curious if their chili is homemade or fresh out of a Sysco can, will check it out.


Dave148 wrote:Kind of disappointing they don't list a mother in law, it being Bridgeport and all.
Suzy Creamcheese wrote:We went to the Ramova today and apparently they are being evicted against their will because the building was sold. No additional intel on the Chinese restaurant rumor, though.
The most exciting thing about the experience for me was that they have a PHONE BOOTH in the restaurant. A phone booth! Did you even know those still existed?!