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FareStart
Moving to the next level
After a three year capital campaign, FareStart raised $8 million
to purchase and renovate a new building. Over the next five years, they
will be able to double the number of students they can train. They can
expand their catering services and provide more meals to shelters and
low-income daycares. The level of excitement at FareStart is
palpable—and they shared it with us in a pre-opening tour.
It’s
amazing how well FareStart has always worked considering their offices
are separate from their restaurant, that there is no real privacy for
discussions between students and counselors and one room serves as
classroom, lunchroom, locker room, lounge and computer lab. Great things
are taught in a very small kitchen.
The new building has five floors, including the basement. The fourth
floor will house fundraisers/development, the executive director and the
finance/accounting staff. Third floor is where any guest or registering
student will find the reception area. It also holds three classrooms
(one large room can be separated into two smaller rooms), soundproofed
rooms for counselors and students to meet, student services, business
operations, catering manager and computer areas for use by employees and
students.
The second floor, or mezzanine, holds an office for restaurant
managers, additional restaurant space and private banquet rooms (one
holds approximately 20, one 30 and they can be opened to seat up to 50).
These will be available during lunch for business meetings, catered
events and overflow dining. They even have a special room to store
wines.
The
first floor and basement are a joy to FareStart staff and students. The
restaurant seats 96 and includes a community table that seats 18. The
table is made from a beam from the building (the former Jersey’s Sports
Bar). "At FareStart, we’re all about second chances," says Dan Johnson,
Development Director. "The table represents this—instead of the old beam
being thrown out, it has a new life as a table." Karla Smith-Jones,
Marketing/Commnications Manager, adds "FareStart provides a community
that transforms lives; a community that is fostered through our
programs. The table is representative of that community—a place where
people can come together." They don’t plan to book the table for large
groups; it will be a spot for individual diners to dine, meet and talk.
They will have two kitchens. Both are true commercial kitchens, the
kind students will work in once they’ve graduated. The first floor
kitchen will provide meals for the restaurant and banquet rooms and has
windows into the restaurant. On Guest Chef Nights, diners will be able
to watch the Guest Chef and students preparing the meal. Behind the
kitchen, there are prep and staging areas. The basement kitchen is
double the size of the current kitchen and will handle catering and
meals for the shelters and daycares. The basement also holds lockers for
students and a lounge where students and staff can eat and relax. A
freight elevator will allow food to be moved between kitchens and dining
areas.
Meals for the shelters and daycares will begin being made out of the
new catering kitchen mid-January. A kickoff fundraiser will be held in
the new restaurant on February 1 with Canlis Chef Aaron Wright with an
incredible menu. The first Guest Chef night will be Thursday, February
8, with Chef John Neumark of Serafina. Catering will start up in March.
When everything’s in full swing, the kitchen is running from 6 a.m. to
10 p.m. seven days a week.
Currently,
40 percent of FareStart’s operating budget is provided from earned
revenue (restaurant meals, Guest Chef Nights, shelter and daycare
meals). When they’ve settled into the new space, they will work toward
doubling the number of students and increasing catering and contract
meal service, moving that number toward 50 percent—something rarely
found in nonprofits. Students know that when they sign on for the
16-week training program at no cost, their labor helps create revenue
which in turn helps the next batch of students.
Photo above: Preview night at the community table, l-r Jeff Peda,
Charles Krug and Mondavi Wines; Tom Cottrell, Apex Cellars; Tom and
Anne-Marie Hedges, Hedges Family Estate; Karla Smith-Jones, FareStart
Marketing/Communications Manager; Dan Johnson, FareStart Development
Director; Chef Tom Black; FareStart Chef Drew Borus; Executive Chef Roy
Breiman, Salish Lodge & Spa
Although the capital campaign is over, fundraising never ceases for
FareStart. You can help simply be eating at the restaurant ($24.95 on
Guest Chef Nights for a three-course meal; $6-8 for lunch), volunteering
or donating money or needed items. There’s nothing like seeing big
rewards from our small actions.
FareStart
7th & Virginia
Seattle, WA 98101
206-443-1233
www.farestart.orgGrand Opening Dinner by Canlis
Thursday, February 1, 2007
$200 per person
Five course, wine-paired meal prepared by
Executive Chef Aaron Wright of Canlis
Contact the Events Manager at
info@farestart.org
206) 443-1233, extension 6213
Lunch served weekdays 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., reservations
206-267-7601
Guest Chef Nights are each Thursday evening, reservations
206-267-6210 |
See our July 2006 article for more details on FareStart’s programs
Connie Adams/January 2007 |
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