Categories
C-BIZ

Juiced up: Business is booming for a socially-conscious local chain

Mike Keenan probably would have been happy with just one Juice Laundry. But he and his wife Sarah are now floating five juice joints in Charlottesville and beyond.

Keenan’s socially-conscious Juice Laundry is ostensibly all about cleansing—cleansing the body through pure ingredients and cleansing the spirit through a business model that gives back to the community and environment. “Our larger purpose,” opines the chain’s website, “is to improve the way everyone thinks about health, nutrition, and his or her body.”

And while the mission is laudable, Keenan says he and his wife understood early on that caring-capitalism might not make the cash flow like OJ. “If we were a corporation being dictated by shareholders who wanted to squeeze every dollar out of the profit margin, we wouldn’t survive,” Keenan says. “We don’t operate that way. In the world we want to operate in, we have to relate to people that you either pay for something up front, or you pay for it down the road.”

The sales job hasn’t turned out to be difficult. Not long after the Keenans opened their flagship Preston Avenue location, they were “bursting at the seams” and opened a second store on the Corner. A modest outpost followed at the UVA Aquatic & Fitness Center. Then, the little Laundry left the local, moving into Washington, D.C., and, most recently, Richmond.

The Keenans’ company certainly isn’t the only firm finding its way on the socially responsible business bandwagon. Defined as businesses specifically focused on leveraging their market power to improve some element of society (think the buy-one-give-one model of TOMS shoes), SRBs are catching on. Exact numbers are elusive, but anecdotal evidence suggests the number of U.S.based SRBs has grown significantly in recent years, and an October report from the Morgan Stanley Institute for Sustainable Investing showed 85 percent of investors are now interested in putting money in SRBs.

“This is a recent phenomenon,” Keenan says. “Maybe five, six years ago, we couldn’t be doing what we’re doing today. There wouldn’t have been enough people. But it is becoming more and more commonplace, and we are going to reach the tipping point where this becomes the norm, rather than the exception.”

As other SRBs crop up around Charlottesville, D.C., Richmond, and the nation, Keenan still believes Juice Laundry is doing something special—if only for its complete commitment to decreasing food packaging waste through compostable, non-plastic products, serving food intended to make people healthier, and sourcing sustainable ingredients that are 100 percent certified organic, vegan, and gluten free.

“We’re passionate,” Keenan says. “The restaurant industry is one of the larger offenders in terms of environmental footprint. If we can spread what we’re doing to our people and our community, we want to do that.”

Categories
Living

New concept pops up at Yearbook Taco

When deciding on what to do next with the Yearbook Taco space, owner Hamooda Shami dug deep into a lengthy note on his iPhone, a note full of mostly wild hospitality ideas that ends with a Peanuts cartoon where Lucy, in her winter coat, hat and mittens, says to Charlie Brown, “I feel torn between the desire to create and the desire to destroy.”

Shami feels that he played it safe in creating the Yearbook Taco concept, which, he says, with its yearbook photos of staff and customers adorning the walls, has run its course. Yearbook reached its peak about 11 months in, Shami says, when the novelty wore off.

With that in mind, Shami will open 11 Months—a space for extended restaurant/bar pop-ups—in February. Every 11 months, he’ll close the restaurant for a month to rebrand, tweak the menu and bar offerings and redecorate the space for the new theme. The general restaurant layout and staff will remain the same.

“When you make a bold, innovative move, sometimes people respond, sometimes people don’t. Either people will respond well, or this will be my most public humiliation,” Shami says, laughing optimistically. He hopes that it goes over well, both here and in Richmond—he’s signed a lease to open an 11 Months there, too. It’s not likely that the two spots would host the same concept at the same time, but he’s open to anything.

And there’s potential for community involvement, he says. If the idea is successful, he’d consider presenting five different concepts for the public to vote on, and whichever concept won would be the next 11 Months Presents theme.

Shami wouldn’t go on the record as to what the first 11 Months concept is, other than to say it’ll be “weird, but not too niche.” But he did profess his love for Morrissey more than once during our conversation.

Juicy news

This spring, The Juice Laundry will open a new location in Washington, D.C., in the Arris apartment building, part of The Yards near Nationals Park. Owners Mike and Sarah Keenan say they were approached by the building’s developer, who had traveled to Charlottesville for a wedding several months ago and happened to visit The Juice Laundry on Preston Avenue.

“We see it as a really great and exciting opportunity to bring our products and passion for healthy living to a new community—and all the UVA grads now living in D.C.,” they say. As for The Juice Laundry here in Charlottesville, nothing will change, though the growth could allow them to expand the menu to include “even more healthy, delicious options.”

Homegrown gal

Allie Hull, founder of Homegrown Virginia and an Ivy resident, will be on hand from 2-5pm Saturday, December 10, at the Crozet Artisan Depot, during the Taste Virginia reception. A variety of foods created from local farm produce, such as jams, jellies and sauces, will be ripe for sampling. Homegrown Virginia makes small-batch recipes highlighting produce picked during the peak of ripeness.