Re: Building an oven in the basement....
I see your biggest obstacle as capital.
Bankers are very apprehensive to lending for restaurants, especially to someone with little or no collateral.
If I am correct, I think most lenders will only lend about 20%, they know people work harder if 80% of the investment comes from the owner/operators themselves.
A very large majority of restaurants fail.
Taking the bankers money and yours with it.
If you have never run a restaurant, the best approach is to find one to work at. Preferably one that you can work your way up to manager.
That is the only way you can learn properly. A good way to learn all the little details.
It can look incredibly lucrative and easy to do on paper, but all the variables.......they can get ya. Things you never even dreamed of.
And if you enjoy your social time, your family time, and your alone time, you will have none of those owning a successful restaurant. It is very hard to find someone who will manage and run it like you would do personally. i.e. It will be very hands on.
I'm not trying to rain on your parade, but just trying to let you know how difficult it is to create a successful eatery.
Either way, good luck to you.
And if you do decide to open the place, lets us know how it goes.
You are not the only with aspirations of owning your own food joint!
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Re: Building an oven in the basement....
Continuing the previous post...
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostThen there is the staff issues as well, inorder for a small place to "work" you staff need to be team players. A small wait staff of 2 or 3 can bring down a place much faster than a wait staff of 5-10 meaning that with a larger operation you have other servers that can pick up tables to make up for the weak ones when you have a small place guess who takes the extra tables.? YOU that is if you are not helping out in the kitchen, host, changing the dinning room music, dealing with an irate customer, making rounds on the floor inroducing yourself, answering the phone, helping the bartender or whatever else comes up, and believe me it comes up usually at a busy time even with the best planning something always comes up.
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostRunning the daily operations of a good restaurtant is like combining clascial music with jazz. Clasical being all the training and preperation the Jazz being having the ability to roll with the punches using your training.
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostDON'T GET ME WRONG I am in NO way trying to discourage you. I dreamed of mine for years before opening. But since over the years I had worked in every position form bus boy to Food and Beverage manager I had a heads up on a lot of the back of the house operations. I took the advice of an Old Italian guy in the town I grew up in which was what I stated above. If you have a job keep it until the las min then go for it and you have to go for it 100% you cant have yourself torn between two priorities the restaurant needs your attention in the same way an infant needs their parent it will NOT flourish on auto pilot.
Or you could just hire a GM @ 60-70,000 and a manager @40-50,000 and supervise them. Which is what a lot of franchise buyers do but then again with a franchise most everything in terms of operations is worked out so you are not opening a "NEW" place that all the above comes with, its really a branch. But what fun would that be..The best part is BEING there..
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostI forgot to add if the building has living quarters above it this is a plus. Not many people want to live above a restaurant/bar but there are people that will this is added revenue that you can use at the very least to pay the mortgage of the building or even the rent. The thing with locations though is unlike other businesses location is not so much an issue..if you have good food and great service people will come. Think of how many hole in the wall restaurants you have been to that may not be in the greatest location but the experience is worth the trip. My place was in the alley of the downtown district in a small town, parking wasn't the greatest but it was never an issue. I got though all the mess of start up and several years of operation only to fall victim to a very messy, insanely costly divorce and custody battel..Oh well the new one will be up and running soon. Wholesale only bakery at my home.
Don't let your dream die...
The question I have now, before I answer any others, is do I lease based on build out cost and lease terms, rent-to-own, or try to invest in the building and become a part-owner of the whole thing, giving me more power, but costing me far more money initially.
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Re: Building an oven in the basement....
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostThis post isnt what my other reply was. I dont know what happend to it?
If you like please take some advice from someone who has been there and done that.
Take the job---take the Job---take the Job. Your dream of the restaurant does not have to die just take a second to the job for right now. I new restaurant venture is extremely, expensive and even more time consuming, you can use the revenue from the job to help finance it a piece at a time. Keep in mind there are thousands of dollars in support equipment for the kitchen, dinning room expenses building permits, upgrading the buildings services (water, gas, electric) putting in bathrooms or remodeling the ones that are there, handicap access, heating and cooling, insulation, initial inventory, cash on hand or a credit line so you can pay the staff for the first month more likely 2 months. Lots and lots of stuff.
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostIts better to start putting money aside for all of this stuff now or developing a credit relationship in anticipation of these expenses. Doing a business plan if for NO OTHER BUSINESS is essential for a good ESTIMATE of a restaurant/bar..bar don't for get your liquor license out here they are about $10,000.00 and if you are in an older neighborhood where the zone is already saturated you will have to buy an existing permit or apply for a variance which can be in the neighborhood of triple that. Since you will be doing food as well the cost drops and I don't know what your fees are there but these are what it is in CA. After you get the job (good luck) go get a program called "Business Plan Pro" or download a free one and get it all on paper...believe me this makes a world of difference. You will see the costs and the realistic steps you need to take to achieve you dream.
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostMake no mistake getting a restaurant venture off the ground is a 12hr a day 7 day a week job you will NOT have time to do both.
Even with at full time manager on staff you still need to act as the General Manager and in the beginning you have dozens of people to deal with that all need your personal time to discuss things that need YOUR input on not that you can trust to a 3rd party you just hired regardless of their resume.
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostThere is also menu planning and preparation once you get the menu decided on you need to see if it is going to work, not if people will like it but how the kitchen staff will be able to execute it. You need to plan prep times for certain foods which means some staff will need to come in early to do prep others need to come in later. Finding this balance can break you in and of itself and it will take several weeks to figure it out, all the while the staff is going to expect to be paid. There is also getting your ordering on a good schedule which again is a delicate balance of loss of product or running out of product. Plus many other things you will need to refine in the first several months all of this takes a tremendous amount of time.. and cannot be worked out on paper ahead of time completely. I mean you can try to forecast trends and busy times but you will not know what the actuals are until you get into it.
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Re: Building an oven in the basement....
I forgot to add if the building has living quarters above it this is a plus. Not many people want to live above a restaurant/bar but there are people that will this is added revenue that you can use at the very least to pay the mortgage of the building or even the rent. The thing with locations though is unlike other businesses location is not so much an issue..if you have good food and great service people will come. Think of how many hole in the wall restaurants you have been to that may not be in the greatest location but the experience is worth the trip. My place was in the alley of the downtown district in a small town, parking wasn't the greatest but it was never an issue. I got though all the mess of start up and several years of operation only to fall victim to a very messy, insanely costly divorce and custody battel..Oh well the new one will be up and running soon. Wholesale only bakery at my home.
Don't let your dream die...
Leave a comment:
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Re: Building an oven in the basement....
This post isnt what my other reply was. I dont know what happend to it?
If you like please take some advice from someone who has been there and done that.
Take the job---take the Job---take the Job. Your dream of the restaurant does not have to die just take a second to the job for right now. I new restaurant venture is extremely, expensive and even more time consuming, you can use the revenue from the job to help finance it a piece at a time. Keep in mind there are thousands of dollars in support equipment for the kitchen, dinning room expenses building permits, upgrading the buildings services (water, gas, electric) putting in bathrooms or remodeling the ones that are there, handicap access, heating and cooling, insulation, initial inventory, cash on hand or a credit line so you can pay the staff for the first month more likely 2 months. Lots and lots of stuff.
Its better to start putting money aside for all of this stuff now or developing a credit relationship in anticipation of these expenses. Doing a business plan if for NO OTHER BUSINESS is essential for a good ESTIMATE of a restaurant/bar..bar don't for get your liquor license out here they are about $10,000.00 and if you are in an older neighborhood where the zone is already saturated you will have to buy an existing permit or apply for a variance which can be in the neighborhood of triple that. Since you will be doing food as well the cost drops and I don't know what your fees are there but these are what it is in CA. After you get the job (good luck) go get a program called "Business Plan Pro" or download a free one and get it all on paper...believe me this makes a world of difference. You will see the costs and the realistic steps you need to take to achieve you dream.
"I'll just tell the school that I'm working remotely from my new restaurant, which I'm more than capable of doing."
Even with at full time manager on staff you still need to act as the General Manager and in the beginning you have dozens of people to deal with that all need your personal time to discuss things that need YOUR input on not that you can trust to a 3rd party you just hired regardless of their resume.
There is also menu planning and preparation once you get the menu decided on you need to see if it is going to work, not if people will like it but how the kitchen staff will be able to execute it. You need to plan prep times for certain foods which means some staff will need to come in early to do prep others need to come in later. Finding this balance can break you in and of itself and it will take several weeks to figure it out, all the while the staff is going to expect to be paid. There is also getting your ordering on a good schedule which again is a delicate balance of loss of product or running out of product. Plus many other things you will need to refine in the first several months all of this takes a tremendous amount of time.. and cannot be worked out on paper ahead of time completely. I mean you can try to forecast trends and busy times but you will not know what the actuals are until you get into it. Then there is the staff issues as well, inorder for a small place to "work" you staff need to be team players. A small wait staff of 2 or 3 can bring down a place much faster than a wait staff of 5-10 meaning that with a larger operation you have other servers that can pick up tables to make up for the weak ones when you have a small place guess who takes the extra tables.? YOU that is if you are not helping out in the kitchen, host, changing the dinning room music, dealing with an irate customer, making rounds on the floor inroducing yourself, answering the phone, helping the bartender or whatever else comes up, and believe me it comes up usually at a busy time even with the best planning something always comes up.
Running the daily operations of a good restaurtant is like combining clascial music with jazz. Clasical being all the training and preperation the Jazz being having the ability to roll with the punches using your training.
DON'T GET ME WRONG I am in NO way trying to discourage you. I dreamed of mine for years before opening. But since over the years I had worked in every position form bus boy to Food and Beverage manager I had a heads up on a lot of the back of the house operations. I took the advice of an Old Italian guy in the town I grew up in which was what I stated above. If you have a job keep it until the las min then go for it and you have to go for it 100% you cant have yourself torn between two priorities the restaurant needs your attention in the same way an infant needs their parent it will NOT flourish on auto pilot.
Or you could just hire a GM @ 60-70,000 and a manager @40-50,000 and supervise them. Which is what a lot of franchise buyers do but then again with a franchise most everything in terms of operations is worked out so you are not opening a "NEW" place that all the above comes with, its really a branch. But what fun would that be..The best part is BEING there..
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Re: Building an oven in the basement....
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostHey what happened to my 2nd reply? I posted a huge reply after Dmun's?? I didn't check it but I remember posting.
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Re: Building an oven in the basement....
Absolutely....
There's a hitch in my plans though, that just appeared yesterday... I have an interview on Friday with the local school district for their network administrator position... This throws the proverbial wrench into the gears, because if they offer me the job, I absolutely must take it for my wife's sanity. If I get the job, I know I will still dream of the day when I can open my own restaurant, but I don't know if I will have the time or opportunity to do so because of the job.
I think what I'll do is just ride it out, see what happens, keep my plans working for the restaurant, and if everything falls into place, I'll just tell the school that I'm either leaving, or working remotely from my new restaurant, which I'm more than capable of doing. This is one of those things that I just can't resist.... the job of my dreams - network administrator - in a school district so I get educator's discount on computers, control of a generally liberal staff that I can start to influence with my conservative views , and sitting around doing software testing when I'm not fixing some idiot teacher's computer...
On that note, I told them I knew how to use MacOS X, so I should probably go borrow one of those today and crash course myself the OS... =)
Of course, the bar/restaurant is also the job of my dreams, especially a SUCCESSFUL bar/restaurant in a small town that will draw people from all over because of the atmosphere and quality of service. There, I get to do whatever I want because I'm the owner, I can bartend, cook, wait tables, or just sit there and watch everyone else if I decide to hire a full staff. As it stands right now, I have a vision, at least 20 people who've said they'd be my first customer, and at least 4 people who've said they'd love to work for me, either behind the bar or in the kitchen. Plus, I have people literally volunteering to help me design and plan the layout, atmosphere, and menu...
What to do, what to do...
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Re: Building an oven in the basement....
Hey what happened to my 2nd reply? I posted a huge reply after Dmun's?? I didn't check it but I remember posting.
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Re: Building an oven in the basement....
I think your place sounds really exciting. I'm curious to see how the plans develop. Perhaps when you're a bit further along you can show us some pictures and/or a floor plan of the place.
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Re: Building an oven in the basement....
Originally posted by dmun View PostMake no mistake, a 60 inch oven is a huge, commercial sized oven. If you want a small oven in the dining area for a decorative fire and an occasional cooking demonstration, a 36 or 39 inch oven is more than enough. I'm a little alarmed by the idea of not insulating the dome in order to heat the room. It may not get up to pizza temperatures at all, while drenching your patrons with sweat. You don't want an oven that will demonstrate how to make a beige pizza.
As for the lack of insulation and sweaty patrons, another good point, and I think I can solve that one much easier. We're building a clay oven this weekend, no brick, just hay, clay, and rocks, and the original intent of the bar-side oven was to replicate the old clay and straw ovens. So, I think what we'll do is build the firebrick dome, insulate it, and then just build the clay dome over the actual oven for the decorative aspect of it.
Originally posted by dmun View PostRemember that every person in the room gives off as much heat as a 100 watt incandescent bulb. Lighting gives off heat. Your kitchen gives off heat. You don't want to be air conditioning in the dead of winter.
Originally posted by dmun View PostGood luck with your project. It sounds great so far. Remember that a lot of what you can do in a building, particularly a commercial building, will be dictated by the building department. Read up on building code, and get friendly with your building inspector. You'll be spending a lot of time with him/her.
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Re: Building an oven in the basement....
Originally posted by phoenixzorn View PostWould I still be able to use the "fireplace" oven to cook out in the restaurant if it had say, a 60" diameter cooking surface? Basically, it would be used to cook a few things every couple hours as sort of a "show" piece on how our kitchen works, and the rest of the time, the embers would be pulled forward to act as a fireplace.
Remember that every person in the room gives off as much heat as a 100 watt incandescent bulb. Lighting gives off heat. Your kitchen gives off heat. You don't want to be air conditioning in the dead of winter.
Good luck with your project. It sounds great so far. Remember that a lot of what you can do in a building, particularly a commercial building, will be dictated by the building department. Read up on building code, and get friendly with your building inspector. You'll be spending a lot of time with him/her.
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Re: Building an oven in the basement....
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostWelcome to the forum... You have lots of stuff going on here.
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostI also have the issue of a sidewalk on the side of the building where I plan to build the oven, and two floors above mine, through which I would have to run the exhaust pipe through the roof.
> You lost me here what are you asking?
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostCould I just run the exhaust through the wall to the kitchen, and run it with the cooking oven exhaust pipes?
>Do you mean the exhaust from the "fire place oven"? are they going to be right above each other along the same wall?
Originally posted by Unofornaio View PostHow do I build my "fireplace" in a way that instead of holding heat, it gives off the maximum amount of heat in a full 360 degree radius? The whole building is stone, and it has 2' thick walls, so the stones behind the oven should reflect the heat back towards the open room.
> an uninsulated oven will act similar to a wood stove heater and the whole dome would radiate heat.
Thanks for your answers to my questions...
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Re: Building an oven in the basement....
Welcome to the forum... You have lots of stuff going on here.
The question I have, is for the restaurant area... I plan to build a "double-scale" model of a clay oven, and use it as a fireplace for the bar/restaurant. I want it to not only provide heat from the mouth of the oven, but also to radiate heat from the sides - keeping heat in this one is not an issue - and keep my winter heating bills reasonable... the place is like 8000 sq ft total, so every little bit helps.
> this is do-able
I also have the issue of a sidewalk on the side of the building where I plan to build the oven, and two floors above mine, through which I would have to run the exhaust pipe through the roof.
> You lost me here what are you asking?
Could I just run the exhaust through the wall to the kitchen, and run it with the cooking oven exhaust pipes?
>Do you mean the exhaust from the "fire place oven"? are they going to be right above each other along the same wall?
How do I build my "fireplace" in a way that instead of holding heat, it gives off the maximum amount of heat in a full 360 degree radius? The whole building is stone, and it has 2' thick walls, so the stones behind the oven should reflect the heat back towards the open room.
> an uninsulated oven will act similar to a wood stove heater and the whole dome would radiate heat.
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Building an oven in the basement....
I'm working out a way to build the kitchen of my new Irish Pub and Eatery which is in the basement of a very old building. As far as I can tell, the "kitchen" area doesn't have a second floor, but the restaurant area does have two floors above it. I'll have to verify the lack of an upper floor over the kitchen. Anyway, I plan on building a double oven in the kitchen, and will be cooking everything in it that I would use a regular oven for normally. I currently don't see an issue with building the ovens in the kitchen, if the ceiling is open above that part of the building.
The question I have, is for the restaurant area... I plan to build a "double-scale" model of a clay oven, and use it as a fireplace for the bar/restaurant. I want it to not only provide heat from the mouth of the oven, but also to radiate heat from the sides - keeping heat in this one is not an issue - and keep my winter heating bills reasonable... the place is like 8000 sq ft total, so every little bit helps. I also have the issue of a sidewalk on the side of the building where I plan to build the oven, and two floors above mine, through which I would have to run the exhaust pipe through the roof.
Could I just run the exhaust through the wall to the kitchen, and run it with the cooking oven exhaust pipes?
How do I build my "fireplace" in a way that instead of holding heat, it gives off the maximum amount of heat in a full 360 degree radius? The whole building is stone, and it has 2' thick walls, so the stones behind the oven should reflect the heat back towards the open room.
I'll be building a brick grill to match the ovens for burgers and other grillable foods, steaks, etc., so if anyone has plans for a gas-fired - or better yet, wood-fired - stone grill, that would be awesome.
Thanks.Tags: None
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