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Tag: Will Hollingsworth

  • Will Hollingsworth’s Buildings & Food to Open Easy Out, New Lakewood Sports Bar Next Month – Cleveland Scene

    Since opening the Spotted Owl in Tremont 11 years ago, Will Hollingsworth and his partners have gone on to open and acquire multiple concepts that include Prosperity Social Club in Tremont, Good Company in Battery Park, Old 86 in Detroit Shoreway, and La Cave du Vin in Tremont, which replaced Spotted Owl.

    Buildings & Food, Hollingsworth’s hospitality group, is driven by the twin pursuits of preserving and launching distinctive one-offs while growing the Good Company brand, which he describes as the engine that powers the entire group.

    “Good Company is the future of this company, in terms of revenue and in terms of allowing us to explore more interesting and creative things,” says Hollingsworth.

    Next up for Buildings & Food is a move into Lakewood. Early next year, the group will open Easy Out, a sports bar concept taking shape in the former Ohio Inn space at 11822 Detroit Ave. Many locals will remember the property as the long-term home of Maria’s Roman Room.

    “This was one of those unicorn opportunities that I’m always looking for,” says Hollingsworth. “We have been wanting for the portfolio a sports bar because it’s a gap in what we offer in the city. We have a lot of bars that are good for a lot of things but not a lot of them are places you’d want to go and watch a game.”

    The spacious bar and dining room can seat approximately 70 guests, not including the secluded rear patio. Diners can look forward to plenty of screens, Cleveland-based sports memorabilia, Golden Tee, darts, and bar food that punches above its weight.

    “Taking that Good Company attention to detail and quality and applying it to sports bar food,” is how Hollingsworth describes it.

    The menu will offer items such as wings, corndogs, chili, salads, entrees and other pub fare. To drink, there will be “dad beer,” craft beer, a few great glasses of wine and sturdy cocktails. The goal is to be open by Super Bowl Sunday.

    Easy Out is just the latest development in a recent flurry of them for Buildings & Food. The partners are well into the construction of a spacious new bakery and production facility in Ohio City, located on West 25th across the street from Intro. Behind the scenes, the complex will be where executive pastry chef Joseph Holmes prepares all the sweet and savory items that make their way to the many Buildings & Food kitchens. On the consumer-facing side, there will be a retail coffee and baked goods component coupled with a quick-serve version of Good Company.

    “The West 25th thing is something that we’ve been working on for a while in order to maintain quality, maintain consistency and be able to keep up with demand for expansion,” Hollingsworth explains. “The production facility will allow us to build more restaurants.”

    To further support future growth, Buildings & Food has brought in chef and restaurateur Jill Vedaa as vice president of culinary operations. Since closing her and Jessica Parkison’s acclaimed Salt restaurant in 2024, Vedaa has been consulting.

    “The time came for us to have somebody at a VP level that oversees everything culinary – all of the kitchens over the entire company,” says Hollingsworth. “We never expected to have so many kitchens, and to be offering such a diversity of product, so it became really clear that we needed someone.”

    It’s been no secret that Hollingsworth has been on the hunt for a new home for Good Company, which is being pushed out of its Battery Park location sometime next year because of new construction projects there. Plans to open a new flagship restaurant at the Welleon in Gordon Square were scuttled due to escalating costs.

    “We just need to find the right space,” says Hollingsworth, adding that the Akron Good Company continues to do well.

    The unexpected exit from Battery Park (alongside the fabrication of the new production kitchen in Ohio City) has forced the company to readjust its priorities. Projects such as the Griffin Cider House property in Lakewood, which the company acquired in early 2024, and the Lolita building in Tremont, which has been lingering since late 2022, remain, for now, on the shelf.

    “I don’t want to do something half-assed at Lolita,” Hollingsworth explains. “I love that building too much; its too important to us spiritually.”

    Hollingsworth and Buildings & Food partners Sin-Jin Satayathum and Kathleen Sullivan worked a combined 23 years at that building, he states. Plus, he adds, it’s not exactly an ideal time to launch a restaurant project of that stature.

    “I want to do fine dining. I want to do something bold. I want to do something interesting,” he says. “And to be perfectly honest, those sorts of concepts are not really being supported here – or anywhere else – right now.”

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  • Buildings and Food’s ‘Party within a Party’ Brings Food, Booze and Live Tunes to Taste of Tremont

    Buildings and Food’s ‘Party within a Party’ Brings Food, Booze and Live Tunes to Taste of Tremont

    click to enlarge

    Aaron Sechrist

    B&F block party poster.

    Taste of Tremont, one of Cleveland’s most beloved street festivals, returns to the neighborhood on Sunday, July 21. The popular event takes place from noon to 8 p.m.

    Will Hollingsworth, founder of Buildings and Food – the parent company of Prosperity Social Club, Good Company, Old 86, La Cave du Vin and Peristyle Coffee – is using the event as a launching pad for a new mission-driven objective. His “party within a party” featuring food, drinks, bands and DJs will provide a much-appreciated boost for the Greater Cleveland Food Bank.

    “Buildings and Food has three big goals for 2024, and one of them is to develop a big annual fundraiser for the Greater Cleveland Food Bank,” Hollingsworth explains. “We’re honored to be a stakeholder in this neighborhood for as long as we have, we’re honored to be taken seriously by an organization as vital to our city and community as Greater Cleveland Food Bank is, and we’re especially honored to get Wesley and the Honeytones back onstage after so long!”

    Hollingsworth, who lived in the neighborhood for a decade, says that the departure of Rocco Whalen and his enduring restaurant leaves a gap in the annual festival that he is eager to fill.

    “Since he and Fahrenheit have left the neighborhood, it’s important that Jefferson Avenue doesn’t become a ‘dead zone’ during Taste of Tremont, which is such an important event to the neighborhood.”

    So, in addition to the usual lineup of food, art and entertainment that Taste of Tremont brings, Buildings and Food’s “Food Bank Block Party” will showcase food and alcoholic beverages from all of its bars, restaurants and coffee roaster. Wesley Bright and the Honeytones – featuring an expanded horn section – will perform after a long hiatus, as will neo-funk band Nathan-Paul & The Admirables, TK’s Soul Collective, and DJs Nicc Nac and Erie Street Vinyl.

    The fun takes place on Jefferson Avenue between West 7th Street and Thurman Avenue. The concert stage will be situated at the bottom of Jefferson Ave.

    “The gradual downward slope of the street will create an amphitheater-type atmosphere,” says a rep.

    Attendees can purchase wristbands for the Block Party on the day of the event or in advance through this link. VIP wristbands grant buyers access to La Cave du Vin’s courtyard, exclusive food and wine, and a private view of the stage.

    Proceeds will benefit the Greater Cleveland Food Bank, with a fundraising goal of $30,000.

    “The Greater Cleveland Food Bank is excited to be the beneficiary of this inaugural event,” says Jessica Morgan, the food bank’s Chief Programs Officer. “The need for food continues to remain high especially during the summer months when children are out of school and not receiving the free and reduced-priced lunches. We are fortunate to work with Building and Foods and with this money raised, provide thousands of meals to those in need right here in our community.”

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    Douglas Trattner

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  • Good Company Akron to Open on Friday, March 1

    Good Company Akron to Open on Friday, March 1

    click to enlarge

    Heidi M. Rolf

    Good Company Akron to open on March 1st.

    Good Company, the easy-going upscale pub in Battery Park, will soon have a sibling. Early last year, Will Hollingsworth announced that he was converting the Spotted Owl bar (60 S. Maple St.) in Akron, which he opened in 2019, into the second location of Good Company. That officially becomes so on March 1st.

    Good Company was launched by chef Brett Sawyer in 2019. In 2022, Hollingsworth folded the property into his burgeoning hospitality group Buildings & Food. That group also includes Prosperity Social Club in Tremont, Old 86 in Detroit Shoreway and La Cave du Vin in Tremont. Buildings & Food is also in the process of converting the former Lola/Lolita property in Tremont into a seperate concept.

    The Akron-based Good Company will offer the same chef-driven American food as the original. Diners can expect world-class wings, amazing sandwiches, burgers and patty melts, and enough starters, sides, and salads to please everyone in the group. An excellent beverage program includes beer, wine, cocktails and boozy milkshakes.

    “We’re so excited to be back in Akron, and we can’t wait to introduce Akronites to the best chicken wings and cheeseburgers on earth,” says Hollingsworth.

    Good Company Akron will be open Thursday through Tuesday from 4 p.m. to close.

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    Douglas Trattner

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