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Living

More than meets the Thai: Chimm specializes in Southeast Asian street food

For Nui Thamkankeaw, part of the fun of being a chef is making every component that goes on the plate, down to the sauces and the curry pastes.

“If you’re a real chef, you really want to get into it,” says Thamkankeaw, executive chef at Chimm Thai & Southeast Asian restaurant, who spoke with C-VILLE through a translator. He grew up in Chiang Mai, the largest city in northern Thailand, and worked in the hotel restaurant industry in Bangkok for years before coming to the U.S. two decades ago.

Chimm, which opened May 23 between The Yard food hall and Alamo Drafthouse Cinema at 5th Street Station, is a sister restaurant to the Thai Cuisine & Noodle House on Commonwealth Drive, co-owned by musician and educator Jay Pun, his software engineer aunt Pim Little and his retired physician dad Pong Punyanitya. They worked with Thamkankeaw years ago, at their previous restaurant, Thai!, one of the first Thai restaurants in town (there are now more than a dozen.)

“There’s so much more Thai food than what people see” in most Thai restaurants in the U.S., says Pun, which is why they’ve focused Chimm’s menu on Thai street food in the hopes of giving Charlottesville a wider taste for Thai cuisine.

Thamkankeaw and Punyanitya explain that Thailand is full of food court-type places where dozens of stands and carts, each specializing in a different type of dish, offer an astounding variety of food.

In addition to the familiar curry dishes, pad Thai and fried rices, Chimm’s offerings include an extensive variety of starters such as chicken satay, skewered meatballs and grilled pork, all of which pair well with the ramekins full of Thamkankeaw’s fresh sauces that a server delivers to the table so they can be enjoyed with any dish. There’s a steamed dumpling stuffed with ground pork, crab and water chestnut served with a ginger soy sauce; salads, including laab, a ground meat or tofu salad in a spicy lime dressing with red onions and ground toasted rice; soups, noodle bowls and classic pho of the beef, chicken and vegetable/vegetable broth varieties. Thamkankeaw will offer daily specials, too, and they’ll be a tad more expensive than the other dishes on the menu, which run between $3 and about $15.

So, which dishes are Chimm’s owners and chef particularly excited for? Pun’s a pho and Thai noodle bowl fan, and Thamkankeaw recommends the khao soi and crispy duck (he loves duck and roasts his own in-house), while Punyanitya’s fond of the wonton soup—so much so that he eats it almost daily for lunch.

Rocket fuel

A new coffee shop has opened at the busy intersection of Route 250 and Crozet Avenue. Occupying the old Gateway Market spot, Rocket Coffee’s aim is to serve quality coffee to the steady stream of commuters that drives by. Owner Scott Link took inspiration for his shop from atomic age iconography, lending the space an almost “Jetsons”-like feel that emphasizes both its convenience and the pep given from its beverages. “It’s simply snappy, it really says coffee,” says Link. In its pursuit of tending to commuters, Rocket Coffee also serves MarieBette Café & Bakery pastries, as well as homemade grab-and-go sandwiches and salads.

Tasty tidbits

Tavola received kudos from Wine Spectator magazine for its “affordable exploration of Italian wines” (C-VILLE arts editor, Tami Keaveny, co-owns the restaurant with her husband, Michael). The write-up, posted to Wine Spectator’s website on May 10, notes that “Wine director Priscilla Martin’s Award of Excellence-winning wine list of around 100 labels is concise but strong.”

Augustiner Beer Hall, in the Glass Building (the former Bebedero space), held a soft opening last week, with full service. They’ve built out a deck into the parking lot, too, just in time for the summer weather.

Jeremiah Langhorne, who grew up in the Charlottesville area and attended Albemarle High School, won the Best Chef Mid-Atlantic accolade at the 2018 James Beard Foundation Awards. Langhorne trained under chef John Haywood at the now-shuttered OXO restaurant before moving on to McCrady’s in Charleston, South Carolina. In 2015, he opened The Dabney in Washington, D.C., and in 2016 the restaurant received one of the city’s first Michelin stars.

Categories
Living

The Yard food hall set to open in May

By Sam Padgett and Erin O’Hare

The Yard food hall at 5th Street Station is gearing up to open in May, in the building next to Alamo Drafthouse Cinema. Jeff Garrison, the project’s lead, says he wanted to “create an active community-engaged area…a great area to hang out.” And so The Yard put extra emphasis on seating, including a shaded outdoor patio and complimentary WiFi. Additionally, if Garrison can obtain a coveted festival liquor license for the space, drinks can be openly carried between the businesses, which is beneficial because The Yard could also serve as an entertainment venue. As for the food half of the hall, The Yard already has leases from Basil Mediterranean Bistro & Wine Bar, Extreme Pizza and Chim, an Asian street food restaurant. While the first restaurants are going to be opening this May, The Yard will continue to add more options.

Fresh start

Back in December, we reported that The Villa Diner would be moving to a new location in town, as its current home at 129 Emmet St. N will soon be demolished when the University of Virginia begins to develop the land at the corner of Emmet Street and Ivy Road later this year.

Now we can report that The Villa’s moving down the road, into the former location of the Royal Indian Restaurant at 1250 Emmet St. N, adjacent to the new Zaxby’s. Villa Diner co-owner Jenifer Beachley describes the relocation as “terrifyingly exciting.” She says that the same atmosphere and service that customers have come to expect at The Villa will move with the business, and there will be a few additions to the menu. The Villa’s final day in its current location will be Memorial Day, and the Beachleys expect the new location to open in June.

Best of the South

In Southern Living magazine’s 2018 Best of the South poll, Charlottesville was named the eighth best food town in the region (food cities are in a different category). In that same poll, Blue Mountain Brewery in Afton was named the best brewery in Virginia.

And in Garden & Gun magazine’s Southern Craft Brewery bracket, Hardywood Park Craft Brewery, whose flagship is in Richmond but operates a pilot brewery and taproom in Charlottesville, made it to the final matchup out of a field of 32 breweries, to take on Scofflaw Brewing Company of Atlanta for the championship. Hardywood was named the bracket winner on Tuesday.

Losing a gem

Pearl’s Bake Shoppe, known around town for its vegan cupcake offerings, among other sweet treats, closed its Charlottesville location on March 24. According to information posted to the bakery’s Facebook page, the owners have chosen to focus attention on their Richmond location instead.

Another closing

Water Street Restaurant—or, chef Brice Cunningham’s rebranded Tempo—closed after service on March 31. The eatery, which served upscale casual French and American cuisine, opened in September 2016.

Brunch game just got stronger

In a March 12 Facebook post, Kung Fu Tea Charlottesville at 1001 W. Main St. announced that it will soon begin serving dim sum (and judging by the hundreds of comments and shares on the post, folks are excited about it). For those unfamiliar with dim sum, it’s a style of Chinese (usually Cantonese) cuisine served with tea for a brunch-type meal. The bite-sized portions of food—think steamed buns, steamed vegetables, slow-roasted meats, congee soups and even dessert dim sum such as egg tarts—are served on small plates or nestled inside little steam baskets.

Quality time

In the last few weeks, a Facebook page called Quality Pie has popped up and begun sharing photos of baked goods, as well as both interior and exterior shots of the former Spudnuts donut shop on Avon Street in Belmont. It appears as though the bakery is the work of former Mas Tapas chef Tomas Rahal.

Categories
News

In brief: #counciloutofcontrol, billionaire’s arrearage, Wegmans trail hub and more

Out of order

Everyone was ordered out of City Council chambers when the April 2 meeting spiraled out of control following public comments from Unite the Right organizer Jason Kessler and Confederate statue shroud-rippers Brian Lambert and Chris Wayne. In a closed session, councilors sought legal advice on dealing with disruptive attendees, such as Tanesha Hudson, who is beside the police officer (above) and who continued to interrupt councilors during a discussion about West2nd. “Tanesha, we’re going to have to move you out,” threatened Mayor Nikuyah Walker.


“While it has been better, it has been very difficult to conduct the meetings and have business take place.”—Mayor Nikuyah Walker after clearing the chamber during the April 2 out-of-control City Council meeting


Adoption nightmare

Virginia Media Relations

The abrupt March 20 resignation of former UVA women’s basketball coach Joanne Boyle, 54, for a family matter was because she has to take her 6-year-old daughter, Ngoty, back to Senegal to finalize her adoption, a process that could take months—or years, the Washington Post reports.

Eyes in the sky

Charlottesville will install seven security cameras in a four-block area near City Hall and the Market Street Garage for $54,000. The cameras will not be monitored in real time and images will be stored for 30 days. Former police chief Tim Longo first called for 30 cameras on the mall in 2007, but cost and privacy concerns stymied them.

Scofflaw governor

Billionaire West Virginia Governor Jim Justice is in arrears on property taxes he owes in Albemarle County to the tune of $148,000. Justice bought 4,500 acres in southeastern Albemarle in 2010 from MeadWestvaco for $23.75 million. Justice reportedly has stiffed West Virginia and Kentucky on taxes as well.

Latest U.S. attorney

Thomas T. Cullen, 40, of Roanoke was sworn in March 30 as U.S. attorney for the Western District of Virginia, a position that’s been open since John Fishwick resigned in early 2017.

Unhappy hour

Chef Geoff Tracy sues the Virginia ABC for restrictions that prohibit publicizing the price of drink specials at his Tysons Corner restaurants—although he can do so at his Maryland and D.C. restaurants.

Friendly with the feds

“Crying Nazi” Christopher Cantwell, who faces charges from the summer’s tiki torch march on Grounds, has written recent blog posts titled “I Am A Federal Informant” and “Why I’m Talking to the Feds,” detailing his quest for revenge on anti-fascist groups. Adds Cantwell, “Maybe the feds fuck me over. It’s a distinct possibility. But I’m DEFINITELY getting fucked by Charlottesville.”

Pound o’ meth

When Jefferson Area Drug Enforcement officers arrested Ersy Alejandro Hernandez on March 23 on an outstanding warrant for sexual battery, they found 458 grams of meth and 28 grams of coke on him, valued at $15,275 and $1,250, respectively. He was charged with possession with intent to distribute more than 10 grams of meth.


Feeling connected

Albemarle County officials have long preached a doctrine of interconnectivity, but a vision of trail biking and walking is more than just a prayer.

The Thomas Jefferson Planning District Commission, which won nearly $500,000 for the project from VDOT in 2016, has revealed its first look at a “trail hub” that would connect multiple current and future pathways near 5th Street Station—the county’s newest shopping center anchored by Wegmans.

The trail system will be located to the east of Fifth Street Extended and north of Interstate 64, with the newly acquired Biscuit Run Park to the south. The Rivanna Trail to the city’s Azalea Park will border the west.

Local architecture firm Land Planning & Design Associates Inc. has had a heavy hand in designing the project.

“LPDA is enthusiastic about this project, which combines pedestrian connectivity, placemaking, amenity design and recreation planning,” says manager Jessica Mauzy. “[It’s] a key building block in the alternative transportation network in Charlottesville and Albemarle County.”

Categories
Living

Save some room: 5th Street Station expands its options

Fifth Street Station is serving up another helping of restaurants, which includes a second location for a Corner favorite, and a Manassas-based traditional Thai restaurant.

Jersey Mike’s Subs: Grab a submarine sandwich from the New Jersey-bred chain at one of the newest additions to its 1,500-store résumé. The approachable menu assigns numbers to each sandwich, and they all come “Mike’s Way,” with onions, tomatoes, lettuce, spices, red wine vinegar and olive oil. Customizable toppings are available too. Open now.

Red Mango: The frozen yogurt franchise that began filling cups with all-natural creamy treats in 2007 has expanded into Charlottesville. A menu full of refreshing options includes the signature sweet and tart frozen yogurt, smoothies, parfaits, sorbettos and fresh juices. Open now.

Krispy Kreme: The international donut chain with the iconic Hot Now red neon sign that lets passersby know when the offerings are fresh, has found a home at 5th Street Station. With a visual donut menu in the form of a glass display case, choose one (or two, or three, or four…) from rows of traditional flavors such as chocolate glazed, or more eclectic ones like Reese’s peanut butter. Opening in October.

Basil Mediterranean Bistro & Wine Bar: The Corner restaurant that serves Mediterranean fare from Greece, Lebanon, Italy, Spain, France and Turkey is opening a second location on the south end of town. Its extensive menu includes a variety of region-specific dishes. Try one of the laffa options: a Lebanese-style pita roll-up with meats, produce and sauces inside. Opening in December.

Extreme Pizza: Pizza isn’t limited to average flavors at Extreme Pizza. International ingredients like Portuguese linguica, a smoke-cured pork sausage, take center stage, along with reimagined classics, such mandarin oranges on a Hawaiian pizza. This pie place chain will be part of The Yard food hall. Opening early 2018.

Zabb Thai Restaurant: The Manassas-based restaurant will open a second location in The Yard food hall, where it will offer up its authentic Thai fare, including noodle and rice dishes alongside signature entrées. Opening early 2018.

Fresh face

If you’ve visited Pippin Hill Farm & Vineyards recently, you might have seen someone new. Ian Rynecki has taken over as executive chef from Bill Scatena (no word yet on what’s next for Scatena), and Rynecki says he’s looking forward to taking advantage of a lush garden and local produce and meat to create new dishes to pair with the vineyard’s vino.

With no culinary school training, Rynecki honed his chops while working in catering in several cities across the United States, including Philadelphia, Big Sky, Montana, San Francisco and New York City.

Virginia, however, is the land of new opportunity for Rynecki.

“The dairy and the meats that I can get here are some of the best in the country,” he says. “And the good thing is that I can visit all of these farms.”

Rynecki is working on a few new additions to the menu, with the help of Pippin Hill’s horticulturist, Diane Burns. His favorite is a duck dish using local meat, and an Andalusian-style gazpacho made from the tomatoes grown in the vineyard’s garden. The tomato dish is on the menu now; look for the duck option and a full-of-fall-flavor toffee carrot cake in September. Rynecki will add new dishes to the menu every month.

“We’re a winery that has to have really good food,” he says.

Categories
News

In brief: Craftivism, kids gone wild and more

Feed lot

Earlier this month, we reported in our Small Bites column about a new food hall concept opening at 5th Street Station. Now we have the rendering to prove it.

The Yard, modeled after the Krog Street Market in Atlanta, will be a 10,000-square-foot mixed-use space next to the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema with five or six restaurants, ranging from 2,000 to 6,000 square feet each, according to Candice McElyea, a spokesperson for the shopping center. It’ll have fire pits (oooh) and string lights (aaah) and will include plenty of indoor and outdoor seating for people wanting to meet for a drink or share a meal. Oh, and free Wi-Fi for our friends working on a tight deadline, or those who simply prefer the company of a laptop.

Come late summer, we’ll see you there.


In brief

Men overboard

Coach Tony Bennett takes his Cavs to Elite Eight. Photo: Jack Looney
Photo Jack Looney

Three Cavaliers jumped Tony Bennett’s basketball ship March 22 and 23. Junior Darius Thompson joined transferring teammates Marial Shayok and Jarred Reuter in heading elsewhere. A fourth Hoo, Austin Nichols, was kicked off the team last fall and is declaring for the NBA draft.

Traffic fatality

Bonnie L. Carter, 47, of Esmont, died in a single vehicle crash on Plank Road near Secretary Sand Road around 12:30pm March 28, Albemarle’s second fatal crash this year. She was driving a 2007 Kia Sportage westbound when she ran off the right side of the road and hit a tree. The crash is still under investigation, county police say.

Kids behaving badly

After a local juvenile shooting and police chase March 16, another 16- and 17-year-old boy from Albemarle County and Troy, respectively, were charged in a March 26 home invasion at the University Forum apartments on Ivy Road. The victim sustained minor injuries.

“It was all for love.”

Jay Obergefell, lead plaintiff in the lawsuit that upheld marriage as a fundamental right, at the Virginia Festival of the Book March 24

Fenwick in

fenwick reelection
Staff photo

Bob Fenwick said he’ll seek a second term on City Council and the Democratic primary nomination. Fenwick, often on the solo end of 4-1 votes, broke a tie and voted to remove the Robert E. Lee statue. He faces challengers Amy Laufer and Heather Hill for the Dem nomination. Mayor Mike Signer attended the announcement, but declined to say whom he’s backing.

Word of the week

resist
Staff photo

Craftivism. First came the pussy hats, now scarves urging “resist” are being spotted around town.

 

 

Alt-right vocabulary lesson

State GOP chair John Whitbeck chastised Trump loyalist/gubernatorial candidate Corey Stewart for calling opponent Ed Gillespie a “cucksurvative.” The term “cuck,” we learn from GQ, comes from porn in which a white husband watches his wife have sex with a black man. It’s a term “used by white nationalists,” Whitbeck told the Washington Post. Stewart says he was just trying to use hip young conservative lingo.


By the numbers

Grounds swell

rotunda
Photo Karen Blaha

Woohoo to the Wahoo class of 2021. Nearly 10,000 prospective first-years were offered a spot at the University of Virginia for the upcoming fall semester from a record number of applicants.

2017 Applicants: 36,807

Offers: 9,957

Likely to be here in the fall: 3,725

Average SAT: 1416

Average in 2016: 1346

Ethnic minority: About 35 percent

First-generation college students: 1,000

Categories
News

Shop talk: What kind of effect will Wegmans have?

Wrapped in a blue fleece blanket covered in pineapples, a sleepy Dori Mock has held her place as first in line at the supermarket’s November 6 grand opening since 4am.

“I’m buying into the hype,” she says, though she’s never been to a Wegmans and doesn’t quite know what to expect. A crew of six friends, young and old, joins her in line in front of the store’s glass sliding door, which is scheduled to open at 7am. They name the staples they are most anticipating: sushi, donuts, bagels, chocolate dome cake and, most of all in this moment, bathrooms.

By 6:30am, two lines of toboggan-hat- and glove-wearing grocery fanatics have formed on each side of the supermarket. Some clutch complimentary coffee that the store’s employees handed out, while others already have a tight grip on their cart, ready to get inside the store. In Mock’s line, the second group of patrons has its own story to tell.

“We were the real first people here,” says Connie Wallace, laughing. She and her coworker, Heather Waugh, who work at the Pantops Chick-fil-A, were so eager to be the first ones inside that they slept in a car in the parking lot.

It was “cold and uncomfortable,” but they kept the car running to stay warm and the shopping center’s security officers checked on them often. However, when they woke up at 5am, they were disheartened to see that people were already in line.

Bummer.

A few minutes before the store’s anticipated opening, both groups, plus a few more from their line, are led into the front of the grocery store, where they are greeted by every Wegmans employee scheduled to work that morning, as well as a number of other Wegmans employees who stopped by to welcome the eager “Weggies,” as one shopper fondly refers to himself.

Store Manager Chris DePumpo and executive chef Jason Voos were both on hand to greet customers on opening day. Photo by Tom Mcgovern
Store Manager Chris DePumpo and executive chef Jason Voos were both on hand to greet customers on opening day. Photo by Tom McGovern

Among the Wegmans staff at the storefront is store manager Chris DePumpo, elevated on a few stacked pallets, and giving his workers the pep talk of a lifetime.

“It’s going to be a busy day. Make sure you take your breaks, keep hydrated, and if it gets a little bit chaotic, the back room is a beautiful place,” he tells the mass of cheering employees. “Love yourself and love each other and there’s nothing you can’t do together.”

All at once, the Wegmans employees and their leaders begin clapping their hands slowly and in sync, gradually speeding up the beat until there is no rest in between their rhythm.

“Give me a W!” DePumpo calls, and the crowd responds by shouting out the letter and forming it with their arms, “Y-M-C-A” style. Then comes the E, the G…and so on.

At the end of the cheer, DePumpo’s pallet throne is dismantled and cleared, and the Wegmans floodgates are opened. It’s time to shop.

“I’m a Weggie!” can still be heard from one member in the crowd, who holds up his Shoppers Club card for a photo.

Customers are first introduced to the produce section, the “crown jewel” of the store, according to Wegmans spokesperson Valerie Fox. Of the 700 items offered, 140 are organic and some are regional, such as the selection of meats brought in from Senterfitt Farms in Madison County and Huntley Farm in Broad Run.

Wegmans has its own organic farm and orchard in Canandaigua, New York, near its Rochester home base, where it has produced a good deal of the supermarket’s produce since 2007. It’s quite a stretch from the company’s inception as a small grocery cart, called the Rochester Fruit and Vegetable Company, launched in 1916 by the Wegman family.

The Charlottesville location at 5th Street Station is Wegmans’ 92nd in the country. According to the store’s special formula—which they declined to share—it was calculated that about 23,000 people visited Wegmans on opening day.

Photo by Tom McGovern
Photo by Tom McGovern

“One comment a customer left was that he’d never been before and wondered what all the hype was about,” DePumpo says, but at the end of the visit, that customer said the experience lived up to its reputation.

So what is it? The vast selection of prepared foods that you can eat in the supermarket’s 250-seat dining room or grab to-go? The sushi that you can watch being prepared? Or is it the pizza shop, the sandwich station or the sit-down restaurant? The 56 cookies baked daily or the fresh fish market? The cave-ripened cheese? Family-pack deals?

John Emerson, a “recovering executive chef,” is now in charge of sushi at all Wegmans stores across the board. He’s excited to give the people of Charlottesville a taste of the supermarket’s famous wild sockeye salmon oshi-zushi, a sushi recipe created by Wegmans’ Takahiro Hachiya, who says the square sushi dish, pressed into a plastic mold, garnished and flamed with a torch, was actually invented in Japan in the 15th century and seldom seen in America.

At Wegmans, however, it flies off the shelves.

“Get it before the bears do,” Emerson says.

Wegmans by the numbers

120,000 square feet

23,000 shoppers attended the grand opening

65,000 products on the shelves, compared with 40,000 in most grocery stores

1,000 different SKUs of beer for sale

$800 for the most expensive bottle of wine, Penfolds Grange

800 parking spaces

700 different produce items (140 organic)

550 employees

92nd Wegmans to open in the country

56 varieties of cookies baked daily

27 registers

The executive chef in Charlottesville, Jason Voos, manages a culinary team of 150 employees assigned specifically to his store. He does a little bit of cooking and a lot of developing the food interests of the people on his team.

DePumpo says that in his 23 years with the company, he’s noticed that, while those things are popular, they’re not what keep the people coming back. He attributes that to the welcoming atmosphere.

“People get a true sense of family,” he says, when they enter the store. “They know [employees] are here because they’re doing what they love.”

Wegmans’ employees are called family members, he explains. And though 6,000 people applied for the chance to work at his store, he could only hire 550 (200 full-time and 350 part-time), with about 50 of them coming from leadership positions in other Wegmans locations.

Put simply, “a lot of planning” goes into opening a store, but the most exciting, and perhaps most important part, he says, is training the new team.

The first employee orientation was held April 28. During that training they identified the store in which each team member would train and observe, and 95 percent of them were sent to locations in Richmond or Northern Virginia.

The training takes place over four days during which employees work for 10 hours a day and stay overnight in their locations—Wegmans pays for their hotels, accommodations and meals.

This gives them enough time to prepare for the big day, DePumpo says, without having to spend too much time away from their families.

For someone who arrived at the store around 3:45am to start prepping for opening day, the best part for DePumpo was that initial Wegmans cheer.

“It was like coming home,” he says.

Neighborhood reactions

While thousands of people rush to take in the newly opened Wegmans at 5th Street Station, some residents in the areas surrounding the shopping center look at the complex with a mixture of disdain and disappointment—and it has little to do with the upscale grocery chain.

“There are both positive and negative effects when a retailer opens a store of this size,” Eugenio Schettini, president of the Belmont Carlton Neighborhood Association, writes in an e-mail to C-VILLE. “The creation of new jobs and opportunities for our citizens—to the impact of increased traffic and the mounting pressures on the local mom-and-pop stores and businesses. It’s not just Wegmans, but the whole shopping center.”

Evan Terrell has lived at Lakeside Apartments on Avon Street Extended for the past six months. Construction on the new shopping center was underway when he moved in—and he isn’t happy about seeing so much of the natural land cleared.

“I understand that Charlottesville is a growing community with growing needs and the ability to spend money,” Terrell says, as he looks down Avon, toward the new traffic light signaling the 5th Street Station entrance. “However, this new complex is representative of a broader, more universal issue regarding the need for growth—trying to balance that with more sustainable behaviors and consuming patterns.”

Terrell says he has already noticed a high increase in traffic coming and going from the area, as well as light pollution and construction. But that isn’t his main worry.

“My concern is that the desire for profits weighed much more heavily than the need to conserve tens of acres of forest land that were there before,” Terrell says. “The atmosphere of Charlottesville—the pride the city has in its small-town community feel, its proximity to the mountains, the forest and the natural areas is not being preserved due to this endless emphasis on growth and development.”

The making of 5th Street Station

Wegmans might be the star of the show, but it’s not the only attraction in the 470,000-square-foot shopping center on 73 acres.

The total investment has been $200 million, according to Jeff Garrison, a partner with the developer, 5th Street Station Ventures LLC, which now owns the property.

“The site was never truly developed before this,” he says, adding that a landfill and storage facility previously sat on the property.

The land was bought before Wegmans, 5th Street Station’s anchor store, signed on, and now the retail occupancy is 90 percent filled—with 21 shops lined up—and some, like the supermarket, already in business.

Joan Albiston lives on the opposite side of the shopping complex, on Royer Drive in the Willoughby neighborhood.

Albiston, a resident there since 2008, says the creation of the new shopping center has had lasting effects on her home: Glowing lights from the shopping center illuminate rooms in her home throughout the night and the sound of nearby highways roars louder—especially during rush hour.

“It just makes me sad, and I see it all the time,” Albiston says, as she looks out her window onto 5th Street Station. “I mean, I’m sitting here looking at people come and go out of the shopping center right now.”

She also says the loss of wildlife habitat is a visible issue, noting that more animals are trying to find homes and food in their neighborhood and are found dead on 5th Street and Harris Road when they meet the increased traffic. A tally of animals struck by traffic includes a bear cub, many deer, a possum, raccoon and fox.

But it’s not all bad news; Albiston admits there are some benefits to the new shopping center.

“People like it,” she concedes. “You could argue and say, ‘Well, less energy gets used because people don’t have to drive all the way to Walmart or to 29 North’ and that has some value.”

Albiston says she is lucky to live in a neighborhood that is still surrounded largely by woodland, as she has seen other areas in town where this is not the case, but says she still wants to voice her concern.

“It really isn’t egregious by many people’s standards,” Albiston says. “We have a really great deal. But, if I don’t say something, how do people know, how do people be careful when the next development comes along? And it will. …In fact, it already has.”—Additional reporting by Rebecca Bowyer


Why C’ville?

In May 2012, the Wegmans team announced its plans to expand into Charlottesville. Though two store locations opened in Richmond earlier this year, supermarket spokesperson Jo Natale says they didn’t affect the decision to bring one here.

She does say, however, that Charlottesville is similar to the New York town of Ithaca, where Wegmans has existed since 1988.

“What’s similar about the two is that both are home to major universities and both have downtown pedestrian malls, but I would hesitate to say that the demographics are comparable,” she says, adding that the Charlottesville store wasn’t studied in comparison to Ithaca’s. “Each site must stand on its own.”

The most important criteria Wegmans looks for in new sites, she says, is a site large enough to accommodate the store and adequate parking, accessibility of the site, population density in proximity to the site and its location to other Wegmans stores.

“If all of these criteria are met, we look at other demographics, like income,” she says.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the median household income in Charlottesville in 2014 dollars was $47,218; Albemarle County was $67,958. (Ithaca, New York, by comparison was $30,318.)


Just the facts

The chain began as a modest food cart called the Rochester Fruit and Vegetable Company in 1916 and is basking in its centennial celebration.

The store offers regional products, like beef from Senterfitt Farms in Madison County.

Five local beers are on tap at the supermarket’s full-service restaurant, The Pub. This includes Evelyn, a session IPA made by Hardywood Brewery exclusively for Wegmans.

Ranked No. 5 on Forbes’ list of America’s Best Employers this year.

Wegmans built and opened its first cheese cave in New York in 2014 to mimic conditions in European cheese-ripening caves. Freshly ripened cheese is then shipped to localities.

For opening week, off-duty Albemarle County Police Department officers were hired to make sure there was a safe and orderly flow of traffic. Up to seven officers were working at a time.


Shelf life

Charlottesville and Albemarle County have never shied away from top grocery chains—in fact, they already have three Krogers, three Food Lions, three Harris Teeters, one Giant, one Trader Joe’s, one Whole Foods and one Fresh Market. So how will the new guy in town compete?

If you ask them, they say it’s their prices.

Red seedless grapes, per lb.

Wegmans: $0.99, Food Lion: $1.99, Kroger: $1.99

80 percent ground beef family pack, per lb.

Wegmans: $1.99, Food Lion: $3.29, Kroger: $3.99

Store brand all-purpose enriched flour, 5 lbs.

Wegmans: $0.89, Food Lion: $1.87, Kroger: $1.79

Store brand macaroni and cheese, 6-7.25 oz.

Wegmans: $0.33, Food Lion: $0.72, Kroger: $0.79

Store brand butter sticks, 1 lb.

Wegmans: $1.99, Food Lion: $3.59, Kroger: $3.49

Colgate Total toothpaste, 6 oz.

Wegmans: $1.49, Food Lion: $1.97, Kroger: $1.89


Photo by Tom McGovern
Photo by Tom McGovern

 Top 10 list

According to a Wegmans spokesperson, these items are some of the store’s most sought-after items.

Wegmans Basting Oil: 8 oz. for $6.99, 16 oz. for $8.99 or a family pack of two 16-oz. bottles for $15.99

Wegmans Fresh Cut Veggie Noodles: package price varies by weight; $6.99/lb.

Wegmans Wild Sockeye Salmon Oshi-Zushi: $6.99

Wegmans Family Pack Tilapia Fillets: $4.99/lb., sold in a two-pound package for $9.98

Wegmans Greek Yogurt: $.69 each or a family pack of 12 for $7.80

Wegmans Ready-to-Cook Chicken Cacciatore: package price varies by weight; $4.99/lb. for a large pack with an average size of 2.9 pounds, $6.99/lb. for a small pack with an average size of 1.3 pounds

Wegmans Culinary Stock: $1.99

Conti Torraiolo Sangiovese: $6

Wegmans Frosted Bite-Size Shredded Wheat Cereal: $1.69

Wegmans Organic Sandwich Bread: $3 half loaf, $5 full loaf

 

Categories
Living

Food options aplenty at the new shopping center

Loosen your belts, Charlottesville. We’re getting more food, food that we didn’t even know we needed. Here’s a quick roundup of what’s open—or will be open soon—at 5th Street Station.

Wegmans A chain that feels less like a grocery store and more like a marketplace, Wegmans boasts a host of specialty items: organic produce and meats, fresh bakery breads, sushi, a market café with a self-serve bar, made-to-order pizzas, sandwiches, a pub with bacon burgers and fish ’n’ chips, a cheese counter, a large wine and beer selection and more. Open now.

Timberwood Tap House The sister restaurant of Timberwood Grill located across from Hollymead Town Center on the north side of town, Timberwood Tap House has an approachable (and cleverly written) menu full of American classics like wings, calamari, burgers, salads, spare ribs, New York strip, s’mores baked Alaska and more, plus sizable beer and wine lists. The bar side of the restaurant is filled with TVs, but the dining side has nary a screen in sight if you’d rather have a side of conversation with your entrée, says owner Adam Gregory. Open now.

Panera Bread The time has come, Charlottesville. You no longer have to leave the comfort of your vehicle to get your broccoli-cheddar soup and asiago cheese bagel fix, because this Panera has a drive-thru. Wear your pajamas, if you like. We won’t judge. Open now.

Fuzzy’s Taco Shop This is the first Virginia franchise for the Texas-based, fast-casual, Baja-style taco chain that has built a cult following throughout the South. Franchise owner Pranav Shah plans to open the restaurant early in the morning so that third- shift workers can come in for happy hour margaritas after work. Opening in February.

Other food and drink spots slated to open at 5th Street are: Jersey Mike’s Subs, Red Mango frozen yogurt and Alamo Drafthouse Cinema. There will be a Virginia ABC store there, too.

Rock Barn to close

According to an e-mail sent to its restaurant partners on November 1, “The Rock Barn will be wrapping up this chapter of its life at the end of the year.” As of last week, the field-to-fork butcher was in the middle of its final production run and will continue to sell its remaining inventory through December. “I have been lucky to work with so many talented people both at The Rock Barn as well as all of our restaurant partners,” says founder Ben Thompson. “I will always be grateful for the knowledge (the late) Richard (Bean) and Ara Avagyan imparted on myself and the team. Double H, under Ara’s guidance, is still doing a spectacular job and continues to be an inspiration for me as we plan the next steps,” Thompson says. As to what those next steps are, we’ll have to wait and see.

Mea culpa: Dabney oversights

In last week’s Small Bites column, we wrote about two Michelin-rated D.C. restaurants that boast local ties (The Inn at Little Washington and The Dabney). We regrettably neglected to mention that Ben Louquet, formerly of Zocalo and Tavola, and Brad Langdon, former bar manager at Public Fish & Oyster on West Main Street, are current members of the The Dabney bar staff.

Categories
News

In brief: Eramo v. Jackie, Wegmans and more

Eramo v. Jackie

Former UVA dean Nicole Eramo fought for months to get discredited “A Rape on Campus” source Jackie deposed for her defamation suit against Rolling Stone. That finally happened April 7, and now Eramo wants the court to throw out “personal attacks” Jackie allegedly made during the deposition, according to April 12 court filings.

Kevin Eisenfrats and gel. Photo Dan Addison, UVA university communications
Kevin Eisenfrats and gel. Photo Dan Addison, UVA university communications

Keeping those sperm from fertilizing

UVA looks like the male contraceptive leader with two different approaches. John Herr is on track to create a birth control drug for men after discovering and isolating a key enzyme and seeking to design a drug that can stop the sperm from swimming to the egg. Kevin Eisenfrats has created and is currently testing Contraline, a non-surgical gel injected into the testes.

Still increased, only less so

Albemarle supes voted to raise the county tax rate 2 cents instead of 2.5 cents April 13, and UVA upped in-state tuition 1.5 percent instead of 3 percent for continuing students, thanks to higher funding from the state.

More rewards waiting

After the disbursement of $150K for information leading to the conviction of Jesse Matthew in the death of Morgan Harrington, Crime Stoppers still has rewards waiting in unsolved crimes: missing persons Jesse Hicks, last seen in 2004, and Sage Smith, missing since 2012; the second perp involved in the 2007 brutal beating death of William Godsey at the Wood Grill Buffet and the 2006 shooting of a UVA student on Wertland Street.

Dogwood Festival’s porno website

People who Google and click on Charlottesville Dogwood Festival find a different type of carnival: Instabang, which warns “the site contains nude pics of people you may know.”

WegmansMap   

ByTheNumbers

Quote of the week

“I am reminded of this history every time that I’m running—because I like to jog—through the city and people lock their doors, or when they look at me with a face of terror even though I’m vice-mayor. …I’m reminded of this history of our country and our past when I’m called names like after the Lee Park press conference, when I was called ‘nigger-loving bastard.’” Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy, City Council, April 18

Categories
News

New leases signed at 5th Street Station

A real estate firm out of Virginia Beach has signed five leases at 5th Street Station, a soon-to-be 465,000-square-foot shopping center on Fifth Street.

The 72-acre space has already promised a Wegmans, but thanks to the 66,900 square feet Divaris Real Estate has signed off on, locals can now expect a Havertys Furniture, A.C. Moore, Timberwood Tap House, Hand & Stone and CommServe, a Verizon Wireless licensee.

The development of 5th Street Station began in November 2014, and it’s scheduled to open in November 2016, according to Valerie Long of Williams Mullen law firm.

Other retailers already planned for the space include Field & Stream, PetSmart, Panera Bread, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Mattress Warehouse, Sprint, Great Clips, Hair Cuttery, Lee Nails, Jersey Mike’s Subs and the Virginia ABC.