New tenant goes round for Triangle Square
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Andrew Edwards
The first business to take up shop in Costa Mesa’s Triangle Square
since Niketown left could be up and running as early as this week.
Pending a successful health inspection, a Kelly’s Coffee & Fudge
Factory franchise could be ready to sell lattes and smoothies to
Triangle Square patrons on Thursday, said Michael Wong, one of five
partners backing the franchise.
The new Kelly’s Coffee & Fudge Factory is set to open on the
mall’s upper level, an almost-deserted zone that used to be home to
Triangle Square’s food court. Bon Bon Sticky Fingers, a candy shop,
is still open on the upper level.
At his day job, Wong is an information technology manager who
holds a marketing degree from Cal State Long Beach. He said he and
his partners have already hired managers for the store, and view the
cafe as an investment, not a full-time job.
“We’re not going to depend on this for our livelihood. That’s why
we could take a chance,” Wong said.
Bon Bon Sticky Fingers’owner Paul Kim held out the possibility
that a new neighbor could bring more customers his way. However, he
acknowledged business has been slow and said he was considering
leaving Triangle Square around the end of summer.
“I don’t know if I’m leaving or not. I’m thinking about it,” Kim
said.
Wong’s entry into Triangle Square could be followed by the
addition of a new Mexican restaurant, Chronic Cantina. Triangle
Square spokeswoman Vanessa Showalter said the restaurant is slated to
follow Kelly’s Coffee & Fudge Factory into the mall’s upper level.
Chronic Cantina’s opening at Triangle Square is not yet a sure
thing. Keith Scheinberg of KSDB Inc., the corporation that would own
the restaurant, said Costa Mesa officials have not yet granted the
permits that would allow the restaurant to open. Last Thursday, he
applied for the Planning Commission to hear appeal of a city
staffer’s decision that the mall did not have enough parking for the
planned restaurant.
Scheinberg said he wants to establish Chronic Cantina as a
family-suitable alternative to Triangle Square nightspots like Sutra
Lounge and the Yard House. He said the company’s use of the word
“chronic” was meant to imply a continuous hunger for the restaurant’s
grub.
“You just want to keep coming back,” Scheinberg said.
Though Scheinberg seeks to open Chronic Cantina near where Kelly’s
Coffee & Fudge Factory is set to do business, he said Wong and his
team could face a stiff challenge at Triangle Square.
“It’s a gamble to be up there right now, for Kelly’s Coffee &
Fudge Factory especially. There’s no foot traffic right now,”
Scheinberg said.
Wong is not discouraged. He said the mall gets busier after the
moon comes out -- when potential coffee customers frequent Triangle
Square’s night spots and movie theater. He plans to keep the store
open late to draw late visitors to the mall.
“At night, it’s phenomenal,” Wong said.
Though Triangle Square’s food court could soon have new tenants,
Showalter said mall managers do not have a new tenant yet lined up to
replace Niketown. Nike Inc. management said there were too many
vacancies at the mall when they pulled the store from Triangle Square
in January.
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