15th Ave Coffee

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15th Avenue Coffee and Tea - Sept. 2009

15th Avenue Coffee and Tea - Sept. 2009

There are two mercantile non-branded Starbucks. Not three. Not four. TWO. Why am I writing this? I recently was reading a blog entry posted by Jon Cook to a Reuters blog about Starbucks and brand avoidance. To be clear, I understand that not everyone is a Starbucks fan, and there is some intense Starbucks negativity out there.  However, I’ve read a few blogs here and there which confuse various concept and heritage store design branded-Starbucks with the two non-branded “inspired by” Starbucks stores.  This recent Reuters blog begins with the very same mistake which I’ve seen elsewhere on blogs:

“Last week, Roy Street Coffee and Tea, located at the corners of Roy Street and Broadway in Seattle, opened.  This is another one of those stealth Starbucks – Starbucks stores without the Starbucks name over the front door – the coffee giant has been opening in its hometown and in London as of late.”

By reading the above, one might be under the impression that there is a mercantile Starbucks in London, which is simply not true.  The above example confuses the Conduit Street LEED registered concept store with the “street level” non branded Starbucks.  Even more importantly, as I am talking to my friends on twitter, my colleagues, and those around me about the experiences to be had at 15th Avenue Coffee and Tea, and Roy Street Coffee, I realize that many people have no idea what I am talking about.

Consider this blog post your introduction to the “mercantile Starbucks” stores, or “Street Level Starbucks“.

So again, there are ONLY TWO “non branded” Starbucks. Sometimes you’ll hear these Starbucks called the “street level stores” or sometimes they’re referred to as the “inspired by Starbucks” and sometimes it is the “mercantile Starbucks”.  Pick your pleasure which of those phrases you want to use to describe these TWO stores.  And again, the two stores are 15th Avenue Coffee and Tea and Roy Street Coffee.

So the logical question is “what’s different about these stores?”.  I want to answer that question from the perspective of someone who spends time in these two non-branded locations. I’ve read writers/bloggers talk about these different stores with descriptions that make it sound like they’ve never stepped foot into a mercantile Starbucks.  So to highlight a few differences between these two stores and a Starbucks:

What’s different about the two mercantile non-branded Starbucks?

  • There is no green classic Starbucks logo.  However both stores have the words “inspired by Starbucks” somewhere on or about the entrance.
  • In the mercantile Starbucks there is no “Venti” size – You can order 8 ounce, 12 ounce, or 16 ounce beverages.
  • These stores use a manual espresso machine. Roy Street Coffee uses a Synesso espresso maker.
  • There is no whole bean wall of beans in flavorlock packaging. Beans come fresh from the Kent roasting plant and are scooped out on a bin, sold in one-fourth of a pound increments. Generally, beans have been roasted within the previous 2 weeks of being sold at the streetlevel stores.
  • The stores occasionally receive small quantities of rare international Starbucks whole bean coffee.
  • At 15th Avenue Coffee and Tea there are no blenders, so there are no Frappuccinos or any other blender beverage.
  • At Roy Street Coffee there are blenders, but Vivannos are not on the menu.
  • Pastries are locally sourced from the Essential Baking Company, and thus have nothing in common with Starbucks pastries.
  • There are no drip brewers: Coffee is either offered as  Clover, a Pour-Over, or in a French press.
  • At 15th Avenue Coffee and Tea, a customer can also order coffee brewed in a Chemex coffee maker.
  • There appears to be no barista dress code.
  • The selection of syrups is very limited (no Pumpkin Spice or other typical Starbucks syrups) and syrups are Monin brand syrup.
  • Simple syrup from Monin is available at the condiment area.  Also Agave syrup in on the condiment counter.
  • Tea selection is only full-leaf Tazo tea.
  • Coffee or tea cuppings are done daily.
  • Milk is strictly steamed per beverage and there is never a pitcher of milk to make multiple espresso beverages.  There are no thermometers.
  • Whole milk is the default milk.
  • The mocha syrup is ganache from Essential Baking Company.
  • Both serve hot tomato soup from Tom Douglas restaurants.
  • Beer and wine are available for purchase.
  • Roy Street Coffee offers Dry Soda.
  • Both serve local foods including a Beecher’s cheese plate, and a Salumi meat tray.
  • Merchandise does not have green Starbucks logo, and merchandise is much more tied to the core competency of coffee. One does not find books and CDs.
  • 15th Avenue Coffee and Tea sells little potted coffee plants.
  • Store designs are unique store specific using many re-purposed furnishings.
  • Roy Street Coffee has unisex bathrooms with hand washing station in a common area and not in stalls.
  • Beverages feature latte art when served in for-here ware.
  • Speed of service is generally slower than at a Starbucks branded store.
  • Menu boards are chalk menu boards with changing offerings.
  • Occasionally these stores receive a limited number of coffee beans from subsidiary coffee brands such as Torrefazione or Seattle’s Best Coffee.
  • Both stores feature live local artists/musicians at times.
  • Pike Place Roast is not offered in the whole bean selection (though whole bean selection rotates often.).
  • Neither streetlevel store offers any “pairings” discounts.

So why are all these details important? The devil is in the details.  The stores are working test stores on an extreme level. They hearken back to the time when beans were scooped out bins, and the Starbucks experience really was all about the coffee. Grind, Brew, and Share.  They are the starting point in a process of figuring out what can and cannot be launched on large-scale, what works, what customers like, and probably what’s profitable too!

I have no doubt that if any customer asks the partners at these stores if they work for Starbucks, they’ll say ‘yes’. There is nothing sneaky about the stores. Of course, a customer particularly knowledgeable about Starbucks will recognize within two minutes that it is completely operated as a Starbucks business. Things like well-known Starbucks coffees such as Verona, Christmas Blend, or Gold Coast give away immediately that this is a Starbucks. And 15th Avenue Coffee and Tea has Via Ready Brew for sale!

Circling back to where this blog entry began, the point here was to distinguish these two stores from the “concept” design Starbucks stores. The “concept” stores are Starbucks.  Though they may have beautiful store designs and Clover brewers, they’re truly Starbucks.  They offer the typical Starbucks beverages and food, and baristas wear green aprons, and they proudly display a green Siren in numerous places.

In a prior blog entry, I pointed out that innovative store design is happening all over Starbucks, but a few stores have been opened up as sort of ‘showcase’ store design stores, and so to list them, they are as follows:

All of the above concept stores are Starbucks.  I realize that I said that before, but it bears repeating. Though the above stores often have very unique store designs, their menu offerings are predictable Starbucks: Oatmeal, lattes, Pike Place Roast, Frappuccinos, and so on …

In short, I hope that I have been able to clear up some of the confusion surrounding the two non-branded streetlevel Starbucks.  Of course the most interesting chapter of this story has not yet been written.  It will be interesting to see how these two stores are functioning one year from now and whether they’ve been able to maintain labor intensive things such as daily cuppings, or whether they’ve given in to more classic Starbucks offerings such as more syrups, larger sizes, and more Frappuccinos.

Of course if you’re in Seattle, be sure to visit Roy Street Coffee or 15th Avenue Coffee and Tea!  So what do you think?

[[Edit: How odd - I think the original Reuters blog link that I referenced at the beginning of this story has been taken down!]]

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700 Broadway E bldg to be site of Roy Street Coffee

[[Update December 2009 - I wrote a second "Roy Street Coffee" blog entry here which posted the day before it opened. I went to a media preview event the Tuesday night before it opened, and covered a little more about Roy Street Coffee in that November blog entry.  In December, I wrote a blog post discussing the details of the differences between the "street level" stores and a Starbucks-branded store. Look for that blog post here.]]

The rumor for a while has been that the next “undercover” Starbucks will be located at 700 Broadway East, in Seattle, Washington, and is called “Roy Street Coffee“.  For those wondering what I am talking about, the first of the “undercover” Starbucks was called “15th Avenue Coffee and Tea” and previously I posted my review of the store here.  Howard Schultz, in an interview with Business Week explains why these new concept stores are not called a “Starbucks” with a large part of the explanation simply being that the stores will service beer and wine.  Also, you can follow Roy Street Coffee on twitter already! Please follow them here!  And click here to follow 15th Avenue Coffee and Tea on twitter! And of course, I hope you’ll follow me on twitter too!

So meet the neighborhood! I realize most people reading this blog are not located here in the City of Seattle, and so I decided to grab my point-and-shoot cheap camera and offer a visual tour of the neighborhood of Roy Street Coffee.  Technically, I believe this neighborhood is the “Harvard/Belmont” neighborhood, but it is much easier and more clear to say “Capital Hill”.

Enjoy!

Roy Street Coffee where main road Broadway turns into 10th

Roy Street Coffee where main road Broadway turns into 10th

Broadway meets Roy Street Signs

Broadway meets Roy Street Signs

Looking North up 700 Broadway East - Classical old Cap Hill neighborhood Street

Looking North up 700 Broadway East - Classical old Cap Hill neighborhood Street

Another view of the building to be the site of Roy Street Coffee

Another view of the building to be the site of Roy Street Coffee

Front of 700 Broadway East - Location for Roy Street Coffee

Front of 700 Broadway East - Location for Roy Street Coffee

A SW view looking across from Roy Street Coffee

A SW view looking across from Roy Street Coffee

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15th Avenue Coffee and Tea: Opening day and beyond

by Melody on September 12, 2009

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A view of 15th Ave. Coffee with a store full of people

A view of 15th Ave. Coffee with a store full of people. Photo by SmooveBCoffee - see blog for more info

On July 24, 2009 Starbucks opened to the world a non-branded concept store at 328 15th Avenue East in Seattle.  I got up early that morning and wanted to get in right away to see it.  When Starbucks opens a new concept store, for me, the experience is akin to the anticipation of awaiting a sequel in a series you know you already enjoy. What will happen to Harry Potter in his sixth year at Hogwarts?  What will Starbucks dream up next for a concept store?

For those of you wanting to dive a little more deeply into this brave new adventure, you can follow 15th Avenue Coffee and Tea on twitter.

Previously, that location had been a Starbucks and so of course it had its own store page on V2V.  And I absolutely recommend having a look at the “multimedia” link on that page. I uploaded a series of photos of the store, some of which I took myself, and some from the generosity of others.  (In addition, I particularly like the photo of 15th Avenue Coffee accompanying this post.  The copyright holder is a guy who tweets as SmooveBCoffee, and also has a coffee blog with an entry on the store.)

So on opening day in July, I waited for the store to open and managed to be person #2 in the door.  Once inside, I found a quiet corner to plop in and get a good look of the store.  The seating is old-fashioned folding hardwood seats.  Aesthetically they’re lovely, but not really the comfy seating that Starbucks is known for.  Juan Valdez, a Starbucks Gossip columnist, can’t write “From the Comfy Chair” but rather it would be “From the Coffeehouse Seating Equivalent of Stadium Seating”.

The pastries are from Essential Baking Company.  Unfortunately, there is no refrigerator so one can choose from white-flour and sugar products primarily, and for other options there are limited choices.  A cheese quiche or broccoli quiche are also available.  It is surprising for me to say, but I think a regular Starbucks offers more food variety than 15th Avenue Coffee and Tea.

The whole bean coffee offerings are exquisite.  There is always something rare and unique to the store that simply can’t be found easily elsewhere.  If a customer wants brewed coffee with a filter method, the choice is a “pour over” cup of coffee, otherwise the Clover brewing method is the main option.  Of course the great advantage of the “pour over” brew method is that its flavor is like brewed coffee, but each person can get his or her choice of coffee beans freshly brewed for him or her.  Major Cohen, project manager for the Seattle non-branded concept locations, tries to find rare internationally available Starbucks beans that would never be found at a regular Starbucks, so I hear.  Thus, the store has had available a Brasil blend of beans which can only be found in a Starbucks in Brazil, and a Puerto Rico blend only found overseas as well.

Turning back to July 24th, Arthur Rubinfeld, president of Global Development, was there that morning checking the place out, and I also saw Cliff Burrows meandering around the place too.  Starbucks partners abounded.  I chatted briefly with Mr. Rubinfeld about store design.  Given that it was 6-something in the morning, and I was tired, I doubt it was even a coherent conversation.  On the topic of store design, the lights in 15th Avenue Coffee are well worth noticing.  After visiting a couple of times, it dawned on me that the ceiling lighting was copied exactly in style from the Starbucks at 1912 Pike Place.

I’ve been back to 15th Avenue Coffee many times, at a variety of hours of the day.  I’ve gone to numerous cuppings, including two tea cuppings in the mix.  The coffee enthusiasm in that store is far more genuine that what’s happening at a typical Starbucks.  I am sure many of us have had the experience of meeting someone who is a Black Apron Starbucks Coffee Master who says “I don’t like coffee”.  I encountered that recently and said, “but you’re a coffee master” to which she replied, “you only need to know about coffee to be a coffee master”.  I’ve gone back as much as I reasonably can, though in reality that neighborhood of Seattle is not convenient to my home and work.

Personally, I wish they had plopped 15th Avenue Coffee and Tea in the exact spot that one currently finds the Starbucks at First and Pike (aka the Heritage Starbucks).  That store would have shined in that location, had less competition for the coffee dollar from independent coffeehouses, and selfishly, would be a far better location for me to regularly visit it.  I can still hope for an Oz-like tornado to help make my dream come true.  Additionally, if the store had been situated at First and Pike, it would eliminate the current (and perpetual) confusion tourists have when they arrive at First & Pike, see a brown siren logo, and think they’ve reach the original Starbucks, not realizing that they reached a concept store opened March 13, 2009.

Will the concept store be a success?  I hope so.  I think it has all the right magic, but at least from what I can see, it is getting a slowish start in developing a loyal fan-base.  The people inside are personable, and real, and the design is a medley of concept stores (reclaimed wood table and furnishings) and 1912 Pike Place inspiration (lights copied from original store, and a manual espresso machine).  One of the major criticisms of the store has been that it is essentially contrived as an indy-style  coffeehouse; If one is already well acquainted with other concept stores, and the store at Pike Place, 15th Avenue Coffee’s  interior design appears to be in logical sequence as the latest episode of the concept store novel.

Perhaps the next concept store will borrow themes from the wood display encasement at 1912 Pike Place (below the registers, display cases) showing the various beans available with engraved coffee names, and prominently displaying a variety of roasts. (Here is a small picture of the interior of the original Starbucks. Underneath the register area one can see wood coffee bins with angled customer-facing glass displays. Though not visible in that picture, each coffee’s name is engraved in wood underneath its display. Likely, once a upon a time, the coffee bins served a vibrant purpose when the store made all its revenue from whole bean coffee.  The copyright holder for the Pike Place Starbucks picture is Lisa Suender.)

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