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Dang...just tried to pop into one of my favourite 'working cafes', the bridgehead at Golden & Richmond in Westboro...

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Oddly, though, it says they have moved to 'The McRae Coffeehouse' on the door. Is Second Cup stamping out the Bridgehead brand? I will investigate...
 
Bridgehead closed their original Bank and Gilmour location (Big windows, exposed brick, eyes on the street), they said, so they could reopen the one at Bank and Albert (big windows, classic wood and travertine finishes). The former is now a tacky drug shop, the interior chopped up with cheap drywall and the windows blocked out. The latter re-closed and sits abandoned in sad deco splendor. Sic transit a commitment to main street spaces. I go to Starbucks now.
 
That's pretty awesome. Hopefully it will do well even though it's quite isolated. NCC has done a good job animating the shoreline over the last 10 years.
 
Wow...this is really exciting! I'm a huge fan of O'Noir in MTL, so cool to see this concept come to Ottawa!

You will be able to 'dine-in-the-dark' at this new Ottawa restaurant

You will be able to 'dine-in-the-dark' at this new Ottawa restaurant​

Dark Fork, a dining in the dark restaurant, will open on George Street in Ottawa's ByWard Market in September. (Josh Pringle/CTV News Ottawa)


Dark Fork, a dining in the dark restaurant, will open on George Street in Ottawa's ByWard Market in September. (Josh Pringle/CTV News Ottawa)
josh-pringle--ctv-news-ottawa-1-5395000.jpg

Josh Pringle
CTV News Ottawa Producer and Digital Lead
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Updated Sept. 18, 2024 2:50 p.m. EDT
Published Sept. 18, 2024 7:42 a.m. EDT

Ottawa patrons will have a chance to eat in the dark at a new restaurant in the ByWard Market this fall.

Dark Fork has announced plans to open the city's first "dine-in-the-dark restaurant" on George Street, where patrons will eat in a dark dining room where cellphones and other sources of artificial light are forbidden.

"'Dark Fork' will open its doors this fall in the ByWard Market, allowing restaurant-goers a chance not only to sample the establishment's extensive menu but also to experience a taste—literally—of life as a visually impaired person," says a media release.

Moe Alameddine is the founder of the dark dining experience.

"Ottawa is a special city to my heart. Ottawa mon amour. This is why I'm here," Alameddine said.

Patrons will begin their experience at the restaurant in a lighted lounge where they can view the menu, but the restaurant "goes dark" as you are seated in the dining area.

"For individuals with typical vision, eating in the dark is a foreign concept, but for people who are blind, sitting down to meals in near or total darkness is an everyday routine," Dark Fork says. "The darkness of the restaurant transforms a prime dining experience into an unrivalled tactile and sensory adventure, allowing sighted people to experience life without vision, along with a correspondingly heightened sense of taste and touch."

Dark Fork says its wait staff will primarily be visually impaired.

"While patrons are unable to see the table or anything else around them, the servers use their lived experience of blindness to expertly wait on tables," the restaurant says. "A guide server explains where patrons can find everything on their table and access the lighted bathrooms—with the assistance of their visually impaired guide, of course."

There are more than 20 dark dining restaurants around the world, including in Paris, London, New York, Montreal and Tokyo.

Dark Fork will open Sept. 25, and will be open for dining Wednesdays to Sundays. The restaurant will be located in the former Mamma Grazzi's Kitchen.
 
Beyond the Pale also taking over the old Coutyard Restaurant, so lots of activity in the area.
 

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