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Atrium Toronto says Hazukido croissants is opening soon there.
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Chain restaurants are primarily inexpensive with numerous coupons and loyalty points, low quality, and have very large marketing budgets.When I look at lots with the chain restaurants, all sitting empty, such as at Warden and Eglinton my first thought is tear them down and build housing.
Chain restaurants are primarily inexpensive with numerous coupons and loyalty points, low quality, and have very large marketing budgets.
In times like this, it's better to eat from an independent restaurant (and not chain restaurants masquerading as independents like Pasqually's (actually owned by Chuck E. Cheese)). The American government bailed out many chain restaurants, but independent restaurants have a much smaller financial cushion.
Atrium Toronto says Hazukido croissants is opening soon there.
Will the Popeyes move from its current location across the street from the Samsung Store or will there be a second Popeyes?Hazukido will be opening in the former Timothy's cafe, near the 40 Dundas entrance. They're also planning to open locations at First Canadian Place and Union Station, according to their website. They are based in Taiwan, with stores also in Hong Kong, Macao, China and Malaysia.
Rumour has it that Popeyes might be opening in the Atrium food court as well.
Don't forget that unlike independents, chains have much larger marketing budgets and many such chains advertise to children and their parents (brand loyalty has to begin somewhere). To pay for the marketing (and to expedite food orders), real quality would be reduced; marketing creates the perception of quality (often through trick photography and Photoshopping) where there is actually none.Yup. Chain restaurants have a better chance surviving. Cheap frozen boxed food off the Sysco truck into the oven/deep fryer and Voila! Dinner is served. The independent restaurants are going to get hit real hard. A lot of their dishes are made in house from scratch. They have high food costs compared to the chains. No idea how these higher end places are going to do, being closed for so long and with a 50% capacity in the dining room when they go into stage 3. And with no tourists, no business travelers, no concert/ show/sporting events /festivals to bring people in, I hope the owners got deep pockets.
Nobody budgeted for this pandemic. Restaurants across Canada are all in the same boat. Sadly it doesn't look like this virus is going away anytime soon.
I have no doubt that there will be devastation in the restaurant industry due to Covid, but at the end of all this and things are back to "normal", I wonder if there will be new growth.
Restaurants A, B and C may close up and be financially ruined, but will there be new entrepreneurs opening new restaurants and concepts as we continue into late 2021 and 2022?
I have no doubt that there will be devastation in the restaurant industry due to Covid, but at the end of all this and things are back to "normal", I wonder if there will be new growth.
Restaurants A, B and C may close up and be financially ruined, but will there be new entrepreneurs opening new restaurants and concepts as we continue into late 2021 and 2022?
Yeah, we need more chains, especially more American chains. The 10 bajillion American chains we already have aren't nearly enough. And they should deliver. We're not nearly as fat and unhealthy as we could be.I wonder if more foreign based chains and brands which survive this will take advantage of the carnage for a quick foreign expansion at cheap commercial rents in Canada? Could we get a proliferation of US, Japanese, and European chains that many have wanted to try for years?
Could we have flunch in Canada?
Restaurants have been reinventing themselves. I agree that dining in is still rather iffy. There has been some creative takes on take-out, and patios are great during the summer months. Fine dining is the biggest loser though You can't recreate the ambiance / experience with takeout there.