18 MAY 2020
IT’S YOUR
BUSINESS
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onth,
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YE OLDE HOTEL RESTAURANT, stuffy and staid, has a menu that consists
of a mediocre burger and just-edible Caesar salad. That’s the stereotype,
anyway. But in recent years, we’ve seen an increasing number of big-name
chefs partner with hotels to open restaurants that are trendy, timely, and
sometimes straight-up important. For the hotels, these partnerships are
a no-brainer: Talented chefs who already have an established following
drive traffic to the hotel—in real life and on social media. These partner-
ships make sense for the chefs as well. For them, hotels help reduce the
amount of risk that’s typically associated with opening a restaurant and
also solve a range of issues that restaurateurs face, from spearheading
staffing to providing health insurance.
ESSENTIAL AMENITIES
“Being in a hotel, if my
oven breaks, I can go
downstairs and say, ‘Hey,
my oven broke,’ and
somebody comes and
fixes it right away. Having
a sales department that
books events for us—
business lunches,
rehearsal dinners—those
help keep the operation
running.” —NINA
COMPTON, COMPÈRE
LAPIN, OLD NO. 77
HOTEL & CHANDLERY,
NEW ORLEANS
UNPARALLELED
OPPORTUNITIES
“Being in a hotel is
extremely different than
having a stand-alone
brick-and-mortar. We’re
not paying rent,
essentially. The hotel
provides help with staff-
ing, human resources,
and accounting. I’m able
to offer my staff benefits
like health insurance, a
401K plan, paid vacation,
and full wages to tipped
employees.”
—KWAME ONWUACHI,
KITH/KIN,
INTERCONTINENTAL
WASHINGTON, D.C. –
THE WHARF
“To raise the capital to make Onda what it is would
have been a huge undertaking. Instead, we were able
to focus on the design of the space, voice of hospitality,
and menu.” —JESSICA KOSLOW, ONDA, SANTA MONICA PROPER HOTEL
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Gabriela Cámara
(left), chef of Onda
in Santa Monica,
California;
Contramar in
Mexico City; and
Cala in San
Francisco; and
Jessica Koslow,
chef of Sqirl in
L.A. and Onda
BUILT-IN
INFRASTRUCTURE
“The hotel comes with
anything that I would
possibly need—the
people, the designers. My
now-fiancée was at the
time food and beverage
director for Sydell Group
[which manages The Line
Austin], and we worked
together on picking the
water glasses. She came
with a manageable size of
options that wasn’t over-
whelming, and then I got
to whittle it down to what
I liked and what was
functional.” —KRISTEN
KISH, ARLO GREY,
THE LINE AUSTIN
SOLID FINANCES
“The financial side is
a huge selling point.
We could never have
afforded to build a
restaurant like this had it
not been for this partner-
ship. It’s a dream restau-
rant. It’s a dream kitchen.
To have that support and
partnership was a holy
s--- moment for us.”
—GREG VERNICK,
VERNICK FISH, FOUR
SE A SONS HOT EL
PHILADELPHIA AT
COMCAST CENTER
Positive Partnerships One reason why
chefs are partnering with hotels to open
restaurants? Risk reduction. By Nina Friend
FROM THE LAWYER’S DESK
According to Jasmine Moy, a New York–based
hospitality lawyer, “Hotel deals take almost all of
the risk off the table.” Moy says there are two main
kinds of chef-hotel partnership deals: Management
agreements usually include a percentage of sales
and profits, and the chef might work with the hotel
on things like loyalty perks and free breakfasts. Con-
sulting agreements might involve base salary for
the chef and a percentage of sales and profits and
require regular updates to several different kinds of
menus, plus a certain amount of on-site presence
per year. Moy says that a third kind of partnership, a
licensing agreement, in which a hotel pays a brand
or chef to put that brand or chef’s name on a restau-
rant, is common in Las Vegas but rare elsewhere.
PHOTOGRAPHY: DYLAN + JENI
FW_0520_FWPro.indd 18 FINAL 3/17/20 3:47 PM