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Seven rules to creating a restaurant-real experience in sports
“Who practices hospitality entertains God Himself.” – Unknown
Food is way more than what we eat. It can show love, it can bring strangers together, it can excite, it can create memories, it can talk to people in ways few other things can – and yes, it can also feed and sustain us. As powerful as food is, it is just one dimension of the hospitality experience. Great restaurateurs know this as fact.
The future as we see it has food experience in sports evolving into hospitality experiences, where all the elements of buying and enjoying food speak to the customer in a clear, welcoming voice. At Stir we apply resources from many disciplines to achieve this clarity of voice. One of our more compelling approaches is to translate the guiding principles and practices of top-flight restaurants to the development of our concepts, in turn applying the sensibilities of a restaurateur to the planning and design of our projects. In the process, we’ve landed on what we call the Seven Golden Rules of Restaurant-Real Hospitality. This article outlines the rules, and then describes the results of applying these rules to creating the concepts for the soon to open Pen at Safeco Field.
These rules have been culled from working with great chefs around the worlds and from having in-depth discussions with them on how to bring together the two very different worlds of fine restaurants and sports foodservice. So to make it “restaurant-real,” do the following as does a restaurateur:
1. BUY: Great restaurants are as much about what they buy as what they do with it. Chef Donald Link of Cochon and Herbsaint in
2. TASTE: While Dave Pasternack was writing his cookbook, “The Young Man and the Sea,” his publisher would call him up and ask if he could put a few more ingredients in his recipes. Typical Dave – he is the master of balance and clarity, and anyone who’s had the crudo at his restaurant Esca in
3. CONNECT: Prime Meats in
4. DESIGN: When designing a concession or a suite program, you generally start with a menu. When a restaurant is designed, you start with a concept. If you want restaurant-real, you need to design as if you are designing a restaurant – the process is the same. We should ask ourselves: “What’s the concept about? What’s the feel like to be at and eat in this place?” At Stir we first create a mood board, using the award-winning Sam Cooper Design to design the road map. After these two steps, then we get to menu and the rest, same as if designing a restaurant.
5. ENGAGE: Seattle-based chef Ethan Stowell told me that a key to any great restaurant is to engage with the community. This engagement with the community requires dedicated effort. Ethan has Kristen Granham who handles this for him in
6. PLAN: Growth is what happens when you’re not operating. Top chefs and restaurateurs are on a never-ending road of discovery, always striving to keep the concept vital and relevant. Planning is an everyday affair in leading restaurants, and in sports with the complexity of very high sales volumes in very compressed periods of time, planning cannot be relegated to the off-season. It must be an ongoing commitment, separate and distinct from day-to-day operations.
7. THINK: Getting an operation the size and scope of a sports stadium to think like a restaurateur is no small task. Our strategy is to bring top local chefs into our projects and into our kitchens as past of our team. And through this association we inform our kitchens and operations with the sensibilities of a restaurateur.
The Pen at Safeco Field
These rules were recently applied to the design of The Pen at Safeco Field. We worked with the Mariners and top chefs to create four new hospitality concepts, opening Friday:
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· Apizza: Here’s a serious attempt to raise the pizza bar in sports. Our chef Bill Pustari, owner of one of the nation’s top pizzerias, Modern Apizza in
· La Creperie: This authentic
· Tortugas Voladoras (Flying Turtles): In Mexico, tortuga is the slang term for a torta, because the bread used to make these sandwiches looks like a turtle’s shell. Tortas are an up-and-coming trend in the
We actively applied the Seven Golden Rules to inform our work at Safeco Field. It’s like the Richard Cushing quote, “When I see a bird that walks like a duck and swims like a duck and quacks like a duck, I call that bird a duck,” applied to hospitality design. By doing things the way a top chef or restaurateur does, we can transform a concession stand into a hospitality experience.

