Urban Farmer: Cleveland's new kid on the block
Follow Sage Restaurant Group every step of the way as it works to open Urban Farmer in Cleveland next April. The modern steakhouse is part of an $80-million hotel project.
Cleveland’s rust-belt resurgence didn’t come all at once.
Over the past decade, small neighborhoods around downtown’s perimeter have gone through major transitions. A handful of streets within downtown itself have been rebuilt, each becoming rows of independent dining and nightlife destinations that draw suburbanites to town.
But the process is still very much under way and there are plenty of items on the punch list. There are areas where five-star restaurants sit among foreclosed homes. A new convention center just opened on the north side of town in the financial district, and, frankly, there isn’t much nearby for conventioneers to experience after a long day of meetings.
Photo: Chris Roberto
Peter Karpinski. Photo: Sage Restaurant Group
That’s where Sage Restaurant Group saw an opening, and that’s exactly the crowd Urban Farmer, a farm-to-table steakhouse that opened in late May just a block from the convention center, was hoping to attract. Positioning Urban Farmer prominently on the ground floor of the brand new Westin hotel, operated by Sage’s hotel group, was as strategic as it was convenient.
The plan was to construct a large sign, something highly visible projecting over the sidewalk to let pedestrians know there is, in fact, somewhere nearby to eat. Early designs called for the sign to be 45 feet tall, protrude 10 feet from the building and have a “slightly weathered” look to convey the message that Urban Farmer is “rural chic.”
But when the sign went up, the lights were dim and the intentional rust made the lettering hard to read. More important, a soft buzz began stirring around town that the sign didn’t represent Cleveland’s heritage well, that rustic in Cleveland is not ironic, that it was almost disrespectful or offensive.
Peter Karpinski, c.o.o. of Sage and founder of its restaurant arm, took those whispers to heart.
“We’ve been very conscious and as respectful as we can be to everything Clevelanders are as people,” he says. “When (the sign) went up, it didn’t just not represent our business well, I don’t think it represented Cleveland well. The worst thing that could’ve happened was that someone saw that sign and was offended by it.”
So Karpinski made the call and the sign came down. It took two and a half weeks and a significant chunk of change to get it remanufactured, and now it’s a brighter sign with more color and less rust.
“We wanted Clevelanders to be proud of it and the first sign was not reflective of that,” Karpinski says.
The sign was not the only thing that went wrong during the opening of Cleveland’s Urban Farmer, but it was the most prominent. Other issues—redesigning a wall, expanding a patio at the last minute, clamoring for a delayed liquor license—are the types of small headaches that pop up with every restaurant opening. A couple months into business, Urban Farmer has hit the ground running. Check averages at dinner are around $80 and Karpinski says the restaurant will beat budgeted revenue expectations.