Tuesday, February 14

Kickstart my Heart: Micro-Batch Honey That Tastes Like Your Neighborhood

Food & Drink Kickstart my Heart is a semi-regular blog series on Portland Kickstarter projects we don't hate.At l... More

Feb 13, 2012 03:20 pm by Ruth Brown  | Comments 0
 

Win Free Cart Food For a Year

PDX Cartathalon II

Food & Drink Put your eating pants on, Portland: Willamette Week's now annual Cartathalon is back! The Cartathalo... More

Feb 1, 2012 01:30 pm by Ruth Brown  | Comments 0
 

BagelGate: Kettleman to Become Einstein Bros.; Portlanders Hit Back

Food & Drink News that Portland's Kettleman Bagels had been sold to the vastly inferior national chain Noah's Bag... More

Jan 31, 2012 12:45 pm by Ruth Brown  | Comments 10
 

Hair of the Dog Heads to Belgium

...and other Oregon beer news

Food & Drink For the last five years, much-decorated Belgian brewmaster Dirk Naudts, who develops beer recipes fo... More

Jan 30, 2012 02:50 pm by Brian Yaeger  | Comments 1
 

Restaurant Cheap Eats Drink Devour
 
 
Home · Articles · Food & Drink · Food Reviews & Stories · Openings, closings and dishy gossip
April 30th, 2008 Deeda Schroeder | Food Reviews & Stories
 

Openings, closings and dishy gossip

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PIE HIGH: Adam Milne, owner of downtown stalwart Old Town Pizza, says he’s planning a grand-opening bash on Thursday, June 5, for a new, second Old Town location on Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard in the new Vanport Square development (yes, it will still be called Old Town, even though it’s not in Old Town). Expect a “soft opening” a bit earlier, Milne says, to work out kinks in the 6,000-square-foot space, which he says will look and feel a lot like the original with the same menu.

(EMPTY) SPACE RACE? After months spent courting local restaurant bigwigs, two hulking restaurant spaces in downtown PDX remain empty with no takers. Desmond Mollendor, a principal owner of the boutique Hotel Modera, at 1515 SW Clay St., says Modera is considering dividing the 7,000-square-foot ground-floor space they’d earmarked for one big hotel restaurant into rooms for two smaller food operations. Modera is slated to open June 1, Mollendor says, with or without a tenant. “With talk of a recession, most restaurants are getting hit,” Mollendor says of conversations with local restaurant owners like Greg Higgins and David Machado. “When they crunch the numbers, it’s just too big.” Portland State University’s new $42 million recreation center, between Southwest 5th and 6th avenues on Montgomery Street, is also lacking food love. Mark Gregory, PSU’s associate VP for strategic planning, partnerships and technology, says he’s also been searching for a restaurant company to take on the 11,000-square-foot anchor-restaurant spot—with no luck—for more than six months. Gregory says he’s hearing economic concerns from national companies as well.

 
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