The Halal Guys,
a Middle Eastern fast-food joint, and Bonchon, a Korean-style fried chicken shop,
will open their second Philadelphia locations in University City, aiming to
serve the area’s youthful population of internationally minded foodies.
They are among
five new restaurants coming to the ground floor of Hamilton Court apartments, a
116-year-old former hotel just off the University of Pennsylvania campus at
39th and Chestnut Streets that Philadelphia developer Post Bros. is renovating.
The eateries
will help invigorate a block that has seen little of the heavy retail
development occurring in other parts of the area, as its population of workers,
residents, and students expands, said Andrew Stober, vice president for
planning and economic development at the University City District, a business
association.
“We’re really
seeing food and beverage work to keep up with that employment growth and that
student growth and that residential growth,” Stober said.
Joining New
York-based Halal Guys and Seoul, South Korea-based Bonchon will be I-CE-NY,
which sells Thai rolled ice cream; Tea Do, a bubble-tea shop; and Steve's
Prince of Steaks, a sandwich shop with locations in Northeast Philadelphia and
Center City. Halal Guys, Bonchon, I-CE-NY, and Tea Do currently have locations
in Chinatown.
Michael
Pestronk, Post Bros. chief executive and cofounder, said in an interview
Tuesday that he subsisted on slices from a pizzeria near the Drexel University
campus while a student there, but that today’s young people have more
sophisticated tastes.
“These
restaurants are international. It’s interesting stuff,” he said. “It’s not just
all Drexel Pizza.”
Post Bros. is
hoping to have the spaces ready for occupancy by late summer, in time for the
start of the 2017 school year, barring construction delays, Pestronk said.
The streets
around Hamilton Court have seen less intensive restaurant development than
areas just to the south and east, where trendy quick-service eateries such as
Shake Shack, Honeygrow, and Sweetgreen have opened.
But more
activity is coming to the immediate neighborhood. Recent additions include
Spread Bagelry at 36th and Chestnut Streets and the Herban Quality Eats and
Schmear It locations at the recently completed 3601 Market apartment building.
Beiler's,
the Reading Terminal Market doughnut shop, meanwhile, plans to open a branch at the
Chestnut Hall apartments at 3900 Chestnut St. in February.
The restaurants
come as University City, bounded by Spring Garden and Market Streets to the
north and Woodland Avenue to the south between the Schuylkill and 50th Street,
attracts more potential customers.
The area’s
population rose 8.8 percent to 52,864 in 2015, from 48,589 in 2010, according
to data compiled by the University City District. The number of area jobs
increased 15.5 percent to 74,952, from 64,893, over that period, while student
enrollment rose 4 percent to 43,908, from 42,218.
The Hamilton
Court restaurants and other nearby eateries also are poised to serve workers
and residents in the uCity Square mixed-use complex being developed just to the north, Stober
said.
Halal Guys
franchise operator Jung Ahn said that he sees plenty of business coming from
the broader University City population, but that the restaurant’s late-night
hours — until 4 a.m. on weekends — and affordable menu should be especially
appealing to Penn and Drexel students.
“Hamilton Court
is really prime for us because it’s right between the two universities,” he
said. “We wanted to offer students late-night eating, year round.”
Source: Philly.com
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