Aychamo BanBan
<Banned>
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So, I've been dreaming for a long time of having a cocktail bar. We have several nice restaurants in our area that have some basic cocktails and a couple of creative cocktails, but nothing that's mind blowing. I want something on the level of Death & Co or The Dead Rabbit level of quality. I have never worked in a bar. I'm thinking of a place around 1000-1200 sqft, no food, open 4-5 nights per week max. I want it to be upscale, the kind of speak easy feel, small, and intimate. Not a huge bar by any means. And places like Death & Co, they have music playing but it's at a reasonable level so you can still talk and no yelling, etc. I'd keep the lights pretty dim, so it always has this dark, small, intimate feeling.
I like all the classic cocktails, but I also like the ones with hard to find ingredients, or ingredients you have to make yourself (like infused gins, or special syrups). These types of cocktails would set me apart from other places in town because no one is doing this kind of stuff where I live. It's hard enough to get people here to use fresh squeezed lime or lemon juice. I would also carry a handful of basic beers for people that just don't want a cocktail, and could consider a couple of local draft beers as well. And like 4-5 different wines. The focus is cocktails, and the beer/wine are for the people that get dragged alone that are just impossible to please (like my GF who insists any whiskey based cocktail is bad before she even tastes it.)
Commercial real estate here is usually about $18/sqft/yr which is about $1.50/sqft/month, which means a 1000 sqft place is only $1500 plus CAM which seems to be around $3/sqft/yr. Traditional bar equipment is around $6,000 per "station." Utilities would be wifi and electricity and water. Commercial streaming of music is about $35/month.
Architecture plans would be required and they fuck you hard on commercial plans. I got quoted $17,000 for my 2,000 sqft clinic space I'm building, so I imagine a smaller, very simple bar would be a lot cheaper. I would work with a designer for the interior who would probably be $5,000. And the buildout would be simple. Two bathrooms, polished concrete or this special tile floor (which would cost about $9,000 for 1000 sqft). The bar would be the bigget expense, with probably $10,000 worth of quartzite for the top, and another $10,000-$15,000 for the bar itself. Another $20,000 for the booths and tables and chairs.
Employees I would start with one bartender at first during the whole soft opening phase. I wouldn't advertise for a long time. Bartender pay I need help with, are they paid hourly, tips, hourly + tips? I'd like the bartenders to be dressed very nice, to keep the speakeasy / classic aesthetic.
Things I know nothing about: 1. Working with an alcohol distributor to get all the booze I need, 2. Setting up an efficient bar station 3. Alcohol laws / permits / etc. 4. How to stop from having your bartender make you go broke by stealing all your alcohol and giving it to customers for free in exchange for large tips.
Costs: I'm still working on how much a drink should cost. One drink I made last night I calculated around $2.50-$3.00 in costs (multiple syrups, juices, bourbon). So I think probably $11-$12 per drink. This means I'd need to sell about 15 drinks per open night at 4 nights open per week to break even on rent/utilities.
Anyway, I'd love to hear from people who own a bar or have extensive bar experience on how to do this and what else I should be thinking about. To be clear, this is a side business for me, it is not and would not be my main job. I can afford to subsidize the bar's rent/utilities/bartender pay on my own with it making $0/month, so I'm not too worried about it being slow at first, etc.
^^ This last pic is my favorite. Nice dark atmosphere, just a few lights, and a lot of the light that is produced by the lights gets absorbed by the dark floor and ceiling. The beautiful curved booths. Gold mirrors, white countertop, mirrors.
I like all the classic cocktails, but I also like the ones with hard to find ingredients, or ingredients you have to make yourself (like infused gins, or special syrups). These types of cocktails would set me apart from other places in town because no one is doing this kind of stuff where I live. It's hard enough to get people here to use fresh squeezed lime or lemon juice. I would also carry a handful of basic beers for people that just don't want a cocktail, and could consider a couple of local draft beers as well. And like 4-5 different wines. The focus is cocktails, and the beer/wine are for the people that get dragged alone that are just impossible to please (like my GF who insists any whiskey based cocktail is bad before she even tastes it.)
Commercial real estate here is usually about $18/sqft/yr which is about $1.50/sqft/month, which means a 1000 sqft place is only $1500 plus CAM which seems to be around $3/sqft/yr. Traditional bar equipment is around $6,000 per "station." Utilities would be wifi and electricity and water. Commercial streaming of music is about $35/month.
Architecture plans would be required and they fuck you hard on commercial plans. I got quoted $17,000 for my 2,000 sqft clinic space I'm building, so I imagine a smaller, very simple bar would be a lot cheaper. I would work with a designer for the interior who would probably be $5,000. And the buildout would be simple. Two bathrooms, polished concrete or this special tile floor (which would cost about $9,000 for 1000 sqft). The bar would be the bigget expense, with probably $10,000 worth of quartzite for the top, and another $10,000-$15,000 for the bar itself. Another $20,000 for the booths and tables and chairs.
Employees I would start with one bartender at first during the whole soft opening phase. I wouldn't advertise for a long time. Bartender pay I need help with, are they paid hourly, tips, hourly + tips? I'd like the bartenders to be dressed very nice, to keep the speakeasy / classic aesthetic.
Things I know nothing about: 1. Working with an alcohol distributor to get all the booze I need, 2. Setting up an efficient bar station 3. Alcohol laws / permits / etc. 4. How to stop from having your bartender make you go broke by stealing all your alcohol and giving it to customers for free in exchange for large tips.
Costs: I'm still working on how much a drink should cost. One drink I made last night I calculated around $2.50-$3.00 in costs (multiple syrups, juices, bourbon). So I think probably $11-$12 per drink. This means I'd need to sell about 15 drinks per open night at 4 nights open per week to break even on rent/utilities.
Anyway, I'd love to hear from people who own a bar or have extensive bar experience on how to do this and what else I should be thinking about. To be clear, this is a side business for me, it is not and would not be my main job. I can afford to subsidize the bar's rent/utilities/bartender pay on my own with it making $0/month, so I'm not too worried about it being slow at first, etc.
^^ This last pic is my favorite. Nice dark atmosphere, just a few lights, and a lot of the light that is produced by the lights gets absorbed by the dark floor and ceiling. The beautiful curved booths. Gold mirrors, white countertop, mirrors.
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