lodasi wrote:BS that it ends so early, if you ask me.
jhawk1 wrote:With all due respect to the previous posters. I have know idea how these businesses plan on doing this market, However I do know as an owner of a business just how hard it is to staff a booth for 1 weekend at a street fest. Most of these places will probably have to rent equipment and have more staff than usual. If they do stay open late, like 10 or 11 then they are going to either have to hire new folks or pay overtime to the current staff to make this work. It is a cool idea but for a 4 hour market a week it is a lot of logistics on those places to pull it off. Just my insight as to why maybe it is not later than regular business hours..I will be there to check it out for sure.
Danny
jhawk1 wrote:With all due respect to the previous posters. I have know idea how these businesses plan on doing this market, However I do know as an owner of a business just how hard it is to staff a booth for 1 weekend at a street fest. Most of these places will probably have to rent equipment and have more staff than usual. If they do stay open late, like 10 or 11 then they are going to either have to hire new folks or pay overtime to the current staff to make this work. It is a cool idea but for a 4 hour market a week it is a lot of logistics on those places to pull it off. Just my insight as to why maybe it is not later than regular business hours..I will be there to check it out for sure.
Danny
laikom wrote:jhawk1 wrote:With all due respect to the previous posters. I have know idea how these businesses plan on doing this market, However I do know as an owner of a business just how hard it is to staff a booth for 1 weekend at a street fest. Most of these places will probably have to rent equipment and have more staff than usual. If they do stay open late, like 10 or 11 then they are going to either have to hire new folks or pay overtime to the current staff to make this work. It is a cool idea but for a 4 hour market a week it is a lot of logistics on those places to pull it off. Just my insight as to why maybe it is not later than regular business hours..I will be there to check it out for sure.
Danny
If you walk down argyle on a typical Thursday at normal dinner time, you will see many businesses completely empty. Many are struggling every day (not Tank or Sun Wah of course), and this could be a great way to get some exposure. More importantly if this market brings in a new crowd of people and gets them excited about Argyle changing for the better, maybe the area will come to life again as it once was.
laikom wrote:Does anyone want to meet me over there around 7:30?
AlekH wrote:laikom wrote:Does anyone want to meet me over there around 7:30?
I was over there before the storms had a couple bites, went home while the storm blew over, and just went back to try a couple more things but quite a few of the vendors were gone or were packing it up.
On the plus side, both Tank and Sun Wah seemed to embrace the street food concept. Tank had a skewered curry chicken, fish balls, and shrimp, papaya salad with dried beef (good), a SE Asian version of elite, and a great looking crawfish dish that I was stretched too thing to try. Sun Wah was live grilling some whole pigs on Argyle as the storms rolled in but was packed up and gone when I went back.
AlekH wrote:laikom wrote:Does anyone want to meet me over there around 7:30?
I was over there before the storms had a couple bites, went home while the storm blew over, and just went back to try a couple more things but quite a few of the vendors were gone or were packing it up.
BR wrote:I couldn't make it there Thursday, and with the GCM BBQ this Thursday, I'll have to wait another week. I could see where this might be considered a disaster for those here on LTH, where many of us have actually traveled in Southeast Asia and visited fantastic real night markets. But even as described, I guess I'm still believing (though I haven't observed the crowds) that this could be good for Argyle. It just has to draw people into the area to check it out, i.e., people who will return and visit these restaurants. And a beautiful Chicago summer night is the real draw.
But I wouldn't expect this to come anywhere close to replicating what you'd find in Asia, and I could see where that might be considered a loss for people on this board. Most of the vendors in SE Asia don't have restaurants outside of what they do at the markets - the small, mobile booths, the massive woks, the carts they haul on motorbikes or peddle . . . those are their restaurants and they've gained great experience making it work, as the jack-of-all trades: the proprietor, chef, sous chef and bus boy. Yes, the restaurants on Argyle should be plenty capable of delivering that same experience, but I just wouldn't expect that. And yet, I still believe it's a great concept and could fulfill at least a decent purpose.