Friday, October 31, 2008

November Events

1. All Saints Day
Celtic New Years Day
Dia de los Muertos (a three-day event)

2. Daylight saving time ends

3. Sandwich Day

4. Election Day

5. Nathan's Anniversary

8. Dunce Day

9. Nick's Birthday
Neon Sign Day

10. Sadie Hawkin's Day

11. Vetrans' Day THANK YOU VETRANS!!!!

12. National Pizza with the Works Day

15. America Recycles Day

17. World Peace Day

19. Pencil Day

20. Great American Smokeout
Universal Children's Day

21. "Hello" Day

23. Tessa's Birthday

27. Thanksgiving - SHEA CLOSED

28. Black Friday - SHEA CLOSED

29. Jennifer's Anniversary

Thursday, October 30, 2008

JB Hudson wins “Coolest Store” Award

MINNEAPOLIS (October 30, 2008) – In the August issue of Instore magazine, JB Hudson Jewelers was named as the fourth place winner in the “America’s Coolest Stores” competition.

This is the seventh year for the contest presented by the national magazine, which is specifically targeted at American jewelry store owners. This year’s contest featured a first-ever split in categories: “Big Cool” for stores with 11 or more full-time employees; and “Small Cool” for stores with 10 or fewer. From a record total of 117 entries, 15 finalists per category were selected by Instore’s editors. Eight industry-expert judges per category provided the top five picks in each category. Judges rated stores in five categories: story, exterior appearance, interior appearance, advertising and marketing and overall individuality. JB Hudson Jewelers took the fourth place prize in the “Big Cool” category.

Architect Angus Goble, President of Angus Goble, LLC, a practice focusing on specialty glass and innovative façade design, was one of the judges in this year’s America’s Coolest Stores competition. For JB Hudson, he stated, “This was my favorite! A stylish and classy interior with great attention to detail, materials and the integration of design elements. The store also has a beautiful exterior. It soars effortlessly.”

Shea, Inc. provided design solutions for JB Hudson as they prepared to relocate, after 78 years, from the downtown Macy’s store to their new location in the Historic Young Quinlan building at 901 Nicollet Mall. Shea worked to preserve the historic structural elements found in the Young Quinlan building and incorporated the classic chandeliers and original jewelry cases that had been in JB Hudson’s former location since it opened in 1929. With a focus on growth and engaging a new generation of customers, Shea also worked with JB Hudson to reposition and refresh the entire brand. For more information and photos of Shea’s work with JB Hudson, please visit http://www.shealink.com/.

Monday, October 27, 2008

CMT Gets New Tenant

Please see article below from the October 24th Finance and Commerce website regarding Shea's client, the Campbell Mithun Tower (CMT). Shea, Inc. worked with CMT for their repositioning and they are realizing great successes.

www.shealink.com

October 24, 2008 1:17 PM CST Finance and Commerce
Dolan Media headquarters moving to Campbell Mithun Tower

by Burl Gilyard Staff Writer

Minneapolis-based Dolan Media Co. has struck a deal to move its headquarters to the Campbell Mithun Tower in downtown Minneapolis.
“We’re just out of space up here. We can’t push any farther out without going out the window. We’re all shoehorned in here,” said Jim Dolan, CEO, president and chairman of the board of Dolan Media, of the company’s current space.
Dolan Media will take the 23rd floor of the Campbell Mithun Tower, a total of 22,700 square feet.
Dolan’s current headquarters are in the Baker Building and U.S. Trust Building on the Baker Center block, just about one block from the Campbell Mithun Tower. Dolan currently leases about 13,000 square feet of space at Baker Center. The company will move to its new headquarters in November.
Dolan said that the company will have 65 employees in the new location, including some technical employees who will relocate from the company’s printing plant location.
“We actually are paying less per square foot in the new space,” Dolan said. The vacant space at the Campbell Mithun Tower had previously been occupied by packaging company Bemis Co., which moved its corporate office to Neenah, Wis., in early 2006. Dolan said the company is in the process of trying to sublease its current office. “We are in negotiations with several parties,” Dolan said. Dolan said the firm never considered leaving downtown Minneapolis. Dolan Media has been in several locations in the same area of downtown throughout its history. “We’ve got a good broker we’ve worked with for years,” Dolan said. Tom Burton of Minneapolis-based Burton Real Estate Advisors represented Dolan in the deal. Jim Montez, senior leasing associate with Bloomington-based NorthMarq, works on the leasing team at the Campbell Mithun Tower, said that NorthMarq had little involvement in the deal because it was a sublease transaction. Montez noted that the term on the existing Bemis lease runs through 2012.
The 725,000-square-foot, Class A Campbell Mithun Tower opened in 1985 as the Piper Jaffray Tower during the downtown building boom of the 1980s. 222 South Ninth Street LLC, an affiliate of Des Moines-based Principal Real Estate Investors, paid $96.5 million for the tower in September 2005. Since then, the owners have invested in building upgrades, particularly improvements to the skyway level. The building is named for advertising agency Campbell Mithun, an anchor tenant in the 41-story tower. After years as a privately held company, Dolan Media went public in August 2007.
Dolan is the parent company of Finance and Commerce newspaper and also owns Minnesota Lawyer, Politics in Minnesota and the St. Paul Legal Ledger Capitol Report. Dolan Media was formed in 1992 and began with the acquisition of Finance and Commerce newspaper in January 1993.
Dolan Media reported revenue of $152 million in 2007. Dolan Media is scheduled to announce its third-quarter earnings Nov. 6.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Warehouse Entertainment District News (Logo designed by Shea)

Warehouse Entertainment District to launch affinity card campaign in Minneapolis
by Bob Geiger Staff Writer Finance and Commerce

The alphabet soup of business and government organizations connected to Minneapolis’ Warehouse District is about to get thicker.

Within two weeks, the Warehouse Entertainment District, or WED, is expected to launch a new marketing campaign, based on the use of affinity cards, in hopes of attracting more consumers to entertainment venues in the Warehouse District before the first pitch at Target Field in 2010.

When visiting one restaurant or nightclub, consumers will be able to pick up an affinity card entitling them to discounts at other venues in the district.

Although not formally introduced, Kaufman said offerings by founding members of WED could include such benefits range as percentage discounts on food to free appetizers with the purchase of an entree.

“We all … go to one place over and over and over,” said Joanne Kaufman, executive director of the Warehouse District Business Association (WDBA), a group of 100 dues-paying local businesses that gave birth to the WED.

The new campaign, she said, is a method of encouraging consumers to sample the variety of options in the district.

"We want people to remember that while the Twins are still playing at the Metrodome, we’re just a short (LRT) train ride away. When you come downtown and Holidazzle with our friends, make dining in WD a tradition. We have everything available.”

Thus the group’s new slogan – “It’s all here” – emblazoned on the new WED logo. The new logo, created by Minneapolis design and marketing firm Shea Inc., will appear on WDBA’s website, http://www.mplswarehouse.com/, along with links to Meet Minneapolis, formerly known as the Greater Minneapolis Convention and Visitors Bureau; and the Explore Minnesota state tourism website.

Not shown on the roster of links: the Downtown Council, North Loop neighborhood in which most of the WDBA is situated, as well as 2010 Partners, a group of public and private stakeholders that’s acting as an advisory group for development surrounding Target Field.

That’s a lot of committees, organizations and business-related groups with a vested interest in the Warehouse District. But Kaufman isn’t worried about potential confusion. “Really, to be honest with you … nobody really cares what it’s called.” The point, she said, is to get people visiting more than the one venue with which they’re already familiar.

Andy McDermott, director of communications for Shea, and Kaufman, who both are active in 2010 Partners, said online marketing for the affinity program will debut within two weeks. She said the WDBA is “still determining our marketing plan so there’s no (media placement) plan yet. The big piece was getting the logo and the identify piece done.”

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Restaurants and Clubs band together under ‘Warehouse Entertainment District’ moniker

MINNEAPOLIS (October 20, 2008) – The bar, restaurant and club owners and managers of the Warehouse District Business Association (WDBA) recently formed a committee to create a collective brand for the area in which they do business. This week, the group is launching the “Warehouse Entertainment District” as its new moniker, complete with a new logo and tag line that will be used in a variety of marketing and advertising vehicles that promote the neighborhood as a place for the entire family seeking the best in entertainment, food, drink and fun.

The committee worked with Shea, Inc., a Minneapolis-based design and marketing firm, to determine and create an overarching brand and identity for the neighborhood that promotes it as a vibrant and fun place for all, and ultimately drives traffic to its businesses. The group is looking to combine efforts under this new brand and develop a marketing plan that includes advertising, public relations, and special events.

Shea conducted sessions with the stakeholders, led by committee chair, Tim Mahoney of The Loon Café, to identify the common goals and the mission for this new brand. Shea’s designers then developed brand identity options, including a logo with the tag line “It’s all here.”

Mahoney says, “With a cooperative effort from the neighborhood businesses, we hope to promote the Warehouse Entertainment District as the first choice for entertainment in Minneapolis. While it is true the neighborhood is changing, we already have so many great options, from world-class music venues to fine dining restaurants to places where you can relax with snacks and drinks.”

WDBA Executive Director Joanne Kaufman states, “We have such a diverse, vibrant neighborhood that we want people to be aware of all the great options and view it as an exciting and inviting place for all ages.”

Kaufman is also currently co-chair of a subcommittee of the 2010 Partners, a group of public and private stakeholders acting as an advisory group surrounding the development of Target Field. The subcommittee is focused on creating a district identity for the area around the ballpark, and this is a larger effort including input from the area residents and businesses, representatives from the city, the Twins and the Ballpark Authority.

Kaufman states, “While the ballpark will round out the entertainment options of the area, we have so many great choices already. The bars, restaurants and clubs want to make sure that people are recognizing the area as a place to visit right now. Our efforts with the 2010 Partners are on a much grander scale, and the process for creating a larger district identity is still in the early stages. We have similar goals for both: making the area recognizable and accessible for all.”

An initial marketing effort with the new logo and tag line will include a link from the WDBA website to specials and promotions offered by the establishments. For more information, visit http://www.mplswarehouse.com/.

Shea, Inc. Company News

Shea is pleased to announce the recent professional advancement of three employees.

Ryan Kronzer, an architectural manager with Shea since 2007, has satisfied the Intern Development Program (IDP) training requirements and passed the nine divisions of the Architect Registration Examination (ARE) receiving the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards (NCARB) Certificate in October. This license signifies that Kronzer has met the profession’s most objective standards of competence and deems him a registered architect in the state of Minnesota. This certification will also allow him to simplify the process of seeking reciprocal registration in other jurisdictions.


Jennifer Fornengo, an interior designer with Shea since 2005, recently passed the NCIDQ examination. The core purpose of National Council for Interior Design Qualification (NCIDQ) is to protect the health, life safety and welfare of the public by establishing standards of competence in the practice of interior design. This qualification identifies to the public those interior designers who have met the minimum standards for professional practice.





Adam Meyer, an architectural associate at Shea since 2004, recently completed his LEED New Construction exam, making him a LEED Accredited Professional. The Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Green Building Rating System™ is the nationally accepted benchmark for the design, construction, and operation of high performance green buildings. LEED Accredited Professionals facilitate the LEED certification process and help building, project, and property owners achieve their performance goals.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Hot Concepts from Shea Creating Lots of Buzz

Minnesota Monthly’s Best Restaurant issue hit the stands this week, and once again, we are pleased to see so many of our client’s concepts honored. Considering the economy, this year’s focus by Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl was on “True Values,” and the Twin Cities spots that offer the most bang for your dining dollar.

In the list, Dara included our latest design, Barrio Tequila Bar, as “Best for Drinking and Dining.” In her full review of Barrio on page 100, she describes the space as “all dark red and gothic black, accented with quirky pieces: a candelabra with wax spilling candles, video screens showing spaghetti Westerns, and, on the walls, retro bullfight posters, cumbia and Latin hip-hop tumble from overhead speakers.” She quips, “If you’ve ever wondered where in Minneapolis indie filmmaker John Waters would take ‘40s cult-film star Lupe Velez and Google co-founder Sergey Brin for dinner, now you know.” She is enamored with James Beard nominated chef, Tim McKee, and his 13 dishes priced at $7.50. We are too. If you haven’t been to the hottest spot in town, you’ve gotta get over there for scallop ceviche, fresh guacamole, red-chile enchiladas and a Macho Camacho (a margarita with smoked chili peppers and cava.)

La Belle Vie, Tim McKee’s flagship location, also made the list as “Best for a Sensible Splurge.” Dara touts the $40 four-course tasting menu in the lounge as “something of a cult sensation.” We just checked our records here at Shea and discovered that we moved La Belle Vie from their digs in Stillwater to their downtown location three years ago this month. Time flies when you’re eating well!

Speaking of James Beard-nominated clients, Alex Roberts’ one-year-old eatery, Brasa Rotisserie, made the list as “Best for Locavores.” Dara believes that after one year, the concept has only gotten better. For us, Brasa exemplifies the new way people are thinking about dining: locally sourced products, fine-dining quality in a relaxed atmosphere and price points that encourage frequent visits. We predict that we will be seeing lots of other operators following Brasa’s lead.

Minnesota Monthly’s rival, Mpls St. Paul magazine, also hit the stands this week, and it also features many of our client’s concepts in the issue. Barrio is the talk of the town right now, so we were not surprised to see it prominently featured in the “Dining Out” section. Apparently, Adam Platt has to visit a few more times for us to receive a full review, but his first impressions are favorable. He says the food is “authentic,” and “carefully conceived,” and about the space, he says, “the ambience is buzzy, with rich Day of the Dead hues (by Shea, to my surprise)….” I’ll have to call and ask him what he means by that.

On page 240, Beth Dooley gives this month’s full restaurant review for Flame, a concept we developed from scratch this year with Hemisphere Restaurant Partners. In her assessment of the Rosedale location she states, “A few whimsical appointments defy mall restaurant style: A brick wall is stacked to the ceiling with split wood; bathroom sinks (long, stainless steel troughs) are loaded with Mexican river stone as a cooling counterpoint.” She also mentions that “Flame was designed to beget other locations.” We definitely worked with Hemisphere with this goal in mind. We’re pleased that Dooley seems to find the “midpriced, family-friendly straightforward concept for suburban locations” to be a hit.

We at Shea want to congratulate our clients on receiving this much-deserved praise. The Minnesota Monthly and Mpls St. Paul magazine issues mentioned are available on newsstands now.

-Andy McDermott, Communications Director for Shea

Across the Country, Restaurants Feel the Pinch

New York Times October 22, 2008 By Nick Fox
THE party’s been over for months and months in South Florida and Southern California, but restaurants there are just now starting to feel the hangover.

In Miami, where the housing bubble bloated most freely and burst most quickly, the effects of the downturn have emerged slowly and unevenly.
“It’s just the last couple of months,” Michelle Bernstein, one of the best-known chefs in Miami Beach said last week as she stood near a few empty seats at the bar of her restaurant, Michy’s. “It’s been scary.”
Even restaurants that say they’re doing fine, in Miami and elsewhere in the country, can no longer afford to play hard to get.
They’ve started taking reservations and adding value menus with phrases that evoke the Depression. And many restaurants say more customers are sharing appetizers, buying cheaper wine, ordering less wine and fewer courses, or just not showing up as much.
Where the economy has struggled longest, restaurants have been hit hardest.
In southern California, restaurateurs interviewed over the past week said business had dropped by as much as 20 percent from the same time last year.
Javier Gonzalez, who opened Costa Brava, a Spanish restaurant in suburban San Diego, seven years ago, said business had been growing by 20 percent a year, but is down 10 percent this year.
“I think what’s been the most affected by the economy is the festive atmosphere in the restaurant,” he said. “Besides people ordering two glasses of wine instead of a bottle, there just isn’t the same buzz.”
“Birthdays and other parties don’t seem as exuberant,” he added. “In the long run, it’s very scary to think what will happen after Christmas and the New Year.”
Bernard Guillas, executive chef at the Marine Room Restaurant in the wealthy San Diego enclave of La Jolla, said he’s still doing a roaring trade, echoing what other high-end restaurants have reported. But he has also begun to offer a $40 prix fixe menu and the 67-year-old restaurant’s first happy hour.
“You just need to be flexible and to realize that people are on more of a budget,” he said. “You have to keep up your attention to detail because a tired restaurant will drive customers away, especially now.”
That sort of flexibility has so far helped independent restaurants avoid the problems of full-service chains, some of which have gone bankrupt and most of which have seen sales fall. (Fast food restaurants like Burger King, and fast casual restaurants like Chipotle have done better.)
Bob Goldin, executive vice president of Technomic, an industry consulting group, said independents are better able to adapt.
“They can change their menus more quickly, add specials,” he said. “Can you imagine what it takes for a chain like Applebee’s to introduce a new item?”
But John Owens, senior equity analyst specializing in restaurants for Morningstar, said that in many cities, big chains may eventually win out. They can afford to advertise more than small restaurants and negotiate better deals with suppliers and get better locations.
“Independents can be nimble and know their clientele,” Mr. Owens said. “Some will be able to compete and do well, but not all of them.
“We’re going to see a lot of independent restaurants shut their doors.”
New York restaurants have avoided the hard times so far, but may be feeling the effects soon.
“New York has probably been the last bastion of stability,” Mr. Goldin said, “but I’m expecting it will change pretty rapidly.” Following are reports on the restaurant scene around the country.
LOS ANGELES
In a city where nipping and tucking is usually done by plastic surgeons, restaurants are coping with a brutal downturn, suffering the effects of both a recession in the regional economy and a strike by screenwriters that brought movie and television production to a halt.
Restaurants that formerly banned customers from modifying menu items are playing a bit nicer and creating specials: the “Hard Times Happy Hour” just arrived at Lola’s in West Hollywood.

“Everyone is trying much harder to make sure the customers they do have are happy,” said Wes Idol, an owner of Pacific Dining Car, an 87-year-old restaurant known for its dry-aged steaks. “But there’s no doubt about it, we don’t really see daylight right now.”

In Southern California, that’s a powerful statement, but perhaps not an exaggeration. Almost every restaurateur questioned reported having about 10 percent fewer customers in the last few months.
Amy Knoll Fraser, an owner of the upscale Grace and the more casual BLD, both popular with the Hollywood crowd, said she has scrambled to change. “California has been in an economic crisis for some time and it has us doing all we can to keep our heads above water and not panic,” she said.
Grace, with its menu of wild boar tenderloin and herb-crusted tofu, is more insulated, she said, because the restaurant features a well-known chef (her husband, Neal Fraser), and has a large events and catering arm. But BLD needed emergency action. Among other changes, the two-year-old restaurant started taking reservations for the first time to better manage labor costs and edited its menu so diners would order main courses, not just small plates. The changes have limited the decline in sales to about 10 percent, Ms. Knoll Fraser said.
The most expensive restaurants, insulated until recently, are also running into the economy’s buzz saw. At Providence, where the per-person dining average is about $150, business over the last month has dropped by nearly 20 percent, according to Donato Poto, an owner. The restaurant has started to cut back on employees’ hours.
“If special-occasion restaurants are now feeling the weakness,” Mr. Poto said, “it’s very worrisome.”
MIAMI
Restaurateurs here say that in the past few weeks, conversations have turned from beaches to budgets.
Ms. Bernstein, 38, the chef and a partner at Michy’s, said her business is down about 20 percent from the same time last year.
Diners, she said, now buy one bottle of wine instead of two, and often order fewer items from her menu, which includes full and half portions. Rising prices have added to the squeeze.
“Flour is up 85 to 100 percent,” she said. “We can’t raise our prices because we can’t lose you.”
On Lincoln Road, the main restaurant row of South Beach, owners and managers described wild swings from night to night.
“Some days we’re off by $100,” said Vinny Cartiglia, a manager at Balans, where the most popular item is the sea bass ($22.95). “Some days it’s by $2,000 or $3,000.”
Restaurants with predictable food at decent prices seem to be doing better. Bars with football fare (burgers, wings, quesadillas) report that business has stayed roughly even since last year, as do the South American cafeterias that dot most Miami neighborhoods.
Some restaurants with more sophisticated offerings have tried to adjust.
Icebox Cafe in Miami Beach, which offers New American fare with a focus on seafood, wine and layer cakes, now offers a “recession cruncher” menu that includes a stuffed red pepper with a beef and rice filling for $12. The owners have also had some success with new, affordable family take-out: a loaf pan of meatloaf, with nine servings, goes for $18.
But perhaps no one understands the city’s stomachs — and wallets — better than Myles Chefetz. He owns four restaurants here.
In an interview at the sleek steakhouse Prime One Twelve, he rattled off his sales numbers. The Big Pink diner was flat. Nemo, an American bistro that has been open for 14 years: down 10 percent. Shoji Sushi: down 13 percent.
And Prime One Twelve, where the average check is $105? Up 6 percent over last year.
To explain why, Mr. Chefetz walked into the restaurant’s softly lighted, crowded dining room. He pointed to a powerful developer who could still afford expensive wine. Mr. Chefetz walked outside. A $200,000 Bentley was parked near the curb. He said he planned to open a high-end Italian restaurant across the street later this year.
“The people here with a lot of money,” he said. “They’re still going out.”
CHICAGO
The economy here has not taken as hard a hit as that of Miami, but as with many places, the convention and tourist trade are off.
Also, restaurant owners and chefs said that diners are choosing less expensive items on menus and wine lists.
And they are asking for separate checks more often, no matter how large the party, said Emmanuel Nony, who opened Sepia, in the West Loop, one of the city’s premier dining zones, 15 months ago.
“It’s never been like that,” he said.
Some say business goes up or down depending on how Wall Street is doing.
“I’ve never seen the restaurant business so concerned about the stock market,” said Arthur Greenan, general manager of One SixtyBlue, a contemporary French restaurant where dinner and drinks come to about $85 per person. “We follow it as much as food prices.”
Mr. Greenan said many diners are skipping desserts, and fewer people come in for a light dinner at the bar. Overall, sales are off by 10 to 15 percent.
But One SixtyBlue is counting on a new chef and some tweaks to its pricing to end the year on a better note.
“The new menu is reflective of where the economy is going and sensitive to people’s spending needs,” Mr. Greenan said. “Chicago, like New York, is looking for what’s new and exciting. For us, this will be significant. We want people to think of us as more affordable on a regular basis.”
Terry Alexander, who owns several upscale and casual restaurants and lounges around Chicago, found comfort in the fact that people are still dining out, no matter what they order.
“I’d say before, our wines at our trattorias would be anywhere between $45 and $50,” Mr. Alexander said. “Now it’s slipped to $38 to $45. We still see people coming out and our total number of guests isn’t going down, but the check average is.”

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Barbecue Buccaneers - Shea Designed Smalley's

Here is a detailed review of the Shea designed restaurant Smalley's Caribbean Barbecue! www.shealink.com

The guys behind La Belle Vie and Solera bring you pirate food.
BY Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl
Minnesota Monthly / August 2008 /


Everywhere I’ve gone this summer, I’ve heard one message traveling through the state, in the style of the classic game of telephone: Tim McKee, the five-star chef behind La Belle Vie and Solera is opening a barbecue restaurant in Still-water—pass it on! Five-star barbecue—pass it on! La Belle Vie for cheap—pass it on!
Well, not really. Yes, Smalley’s Caribbean Barbecue is indeed a barbecue restaurant in Stillwater led by the illustrious Tim McKee and his business partner, Josh Thoma. But the food at Smalley’s bears little resemblance to the precise, exquisitely focused creations of La Belle Vie. No, the food at Smalley’s is chicken wings and pork ribs, served on paper in plastic baskets, best paired with cold beer.
Yup, I said chicken wings and pork ribs in plastic baskets. And smoked beef brisket, pork shoulder, pulled pork sandwiches, and burgers. Doesn’t sound like a Tim McKee restaurant, does it? It doesn’t taste like one either. It mostly tastes like barbecue, albeit not the usual barbecue we run into around here, but Jamaican barbecue.

What’s Jamaican barbecue? It’s Tim McKee’s favorite kind of barbecue. It’s barbecue he loves so much that he convinced folks running a rib shack on a beach in Jamaica to teach him their secrets. It’s made by treating meat with an allspice-heavy marinade, then grilling it over hardwood oak logs that have been embellished with lots of pimento wood chips—pimento trees being where allspice berries come from—for true pimento wood smoke. So, Jamaican barbecue has a lot of allspice going on: There’s the allspice marinade, the allspice smoke, and, naturally, the allspice in the barbecue sauce. It’s unlike any barbecue I’ve ever had before.

I liked the chicken at Smalley’s the best. It’s a very interesting, very different, very complex sort of chicken, and the pimento wood gives it a profoundly herbal profile, with tastes of oregano, rosemary, eucalyptus, nettles, and lime peel. The pork shoulder and ribs are excellent too, but very different than the chicken. In the pork, the smoke and marinade seem to pull out a sweet, ham-like quality in the meat, a sweetness accented by the many peppery and herbal notes imparted by the pimento wood. In typical barbecue restaurant fashion, the food here is available in all sorts of platters pairing one or more meats with side dishes, most of which derive from the classic Southern meat-and-three tradition. For instance, there’s a good, simple, creamy mac-and-cheese; pork and beans; roasted sweet potatoes with sausage; and a few more obviously Caribbean dishes, like curried vegetables. However, even though I tasted just about every side Smalley’s offered, I never found one about which I thought: This is spectacular. I have to have more of this. I have to have the recipe. Everything just struck me as: pretty good.

A few things didn’t even hit pretty good. I thought the beef brisket was peculiar. Ordered without barbecue sauce, the meat was dry and tough. Ordered with sauce, its flavor became lost, making the whole thing taste like some odd sauerbraten reduction. Similarly, the barbecued shrimp, grilled prettily on sugar-cane skewers, lost all shrimp taste amid the smoke and sauce; the shrimp may as well have been plantains or tofu. The appetizers were the biggest disappointment. The crab cakes tasted like coconut and breading, and the fried green tomatoes and corn fritters were nearly indistinguishable, each being sort of flavorless. Desserts, like a lively Key-lime pie and a coconut flan with rum caramel, were rock-solid, but the only items I tasted at Smalley’s that I thought were worth a trip to Stillwater were the drinks.

Yes, the drinks. In addition to 40-odd rums, including single-estate rarities from Trinidad, Haiti, and St. Croix, Smalley’s offers a number of playful, flavorful cocktails. All were devised by La Belle Vie’s bar manager Johnny Michaels who really outdid himself with drinks like the fantastic Kingston, in which a house-made grapefruit syrup and a sour-cherry eau de vie pluck out the sweet and spicy notes of a (what else?) allspice-infused rum. Each sip was refreshing, brisk, spicy, and lovely. Michaels tells me the Kingston is his update on a classic cocktail called the Hemingway daiquiri; he also tells me I missed the best drink at Smalley’s: the Kill Devil shot. “In Barbados, they used to call the rum ‘kill devil’ because it was so harsh,” Michaels says. “So I thought, let’s bring back the old-time macho-man pirate liquor.” To make his Kill Devil, he takes a variety of rums, including 151-proof Bacardi, combines them with some top-secret flavoring agents and syrups and decants the whole mixture into old port bottles (to which he has affixed special pirate Kill Devil labels). One of the reasons I didn’t try the Kill Devil shot is that it wasn’t on the menu. It’s basically a top-secret pirate drink, for pirates in the know.

Pirates?
Oh, yes. Now, the Smalley’s folks are happy to tell you that Smalley’s is a pirate bar from the moment you walk in the door, but I assumed this was just a toss-off gimmick. It isn’t. There is, in fact, a resident pirate at Smalley’s, and his name is Shawn Smalley. In addition to being the chef de cuisine and namesake of Smalley’s, Smalley himself is a proud Stillwater townie (Stillwater High School Class of ’95) and pirate. “I walked out into the bar the other night, and this guy was like, ‘I heard you looked like a pirate, but seriously, you look like a pirate,’ ” Smalley says. “I do. I’ve got the long hair, beard, tattoos, the whole deal. I had a pirate wedding: Everyone was dressed to the hilt, there were swords everywhere. And instead of, you know, a unity candle, we had a ‘mixing of the rum’ ceremony.” And your wife, I asked, was she dressed as a pirate? “No, she was more princessy. But white and purple, because we’re big Vikings fans.”
Smalley’s got its start, Shawn told me, “Because this is how we cooks treat ourselves. When I was at La Belle Vie every Friday or Saturday, I’d make chicken wings for the staff. I like to make them really hot because everyone’s really hungry at the end of the night and they got tortured trying to eat them. I get some sick pleasure out of that.” And in the future? Smalley’s will be “the ultimate pirate hang-out bar,” Smalley says. “It’s pretty damn awesome the way it is, but we have five coconut heads hanging down off the ceiling in the bar right now, and I want to have 500.”

Which is how I came to understand how Smalley’s is truly a Tim McKee restaurant. Because one of the lesser-known aspects of being a five-star chef is having the ability to keep, retain, inspire, lead, and, generally, enjoy a whole lot of 20-something cooks—the people who actually make the five-star food. Or rather, your ability to head a band of pirates. “It’s a pretty ragtag crew back there,” admits McKee. “But really, this is exactly how I cook when I’m just having a good time. My favorite thing in the summer is to go out on the river, get up on an island, make a campfire, bring a makeshift grill, prop it up, and cook. And that’s what we’re doing here. It’s just no pretensions, good cooking.”

No pretensions, good cooking by pirates, for pirates. And for the people who like to eat like pirates. Pass it on.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

October Events

The following are days to note on your calendar:

3 - Nick's Anniversary
4 - Justin's Anniversary, National Golf Day
13 - Tanya's Birthday, Columbus Day (no mail)
15 - National Grouch Day
16 - Boss's Day
18 - Heidi M's Anniversary, Sweetest Day
19 - Cori's Birthday
24 - Amanda's Birthday
31 - Halloween

Friday, October 10, 2008

Ryan Cos. US, Inc., completes St. Paul Federal Building renovation

News about a long-time Shea client and project partner:

by Jim Brubaker
Minneapolis-St. Paul
http://rejournals.com/

Warren E. Burger Federal Building and U.S. CourthouseRenovations and alterations to to the Warren E. Burger Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse by Ryan Cos. US, Inc., have been completed.

Located in downtown St. Paul, the 160,000-square-foot, $30 million renovation and alteration plan included the construction of four new District Court courtrooms. Renovations were performed on four existing District Court courtrooms as well as the front entry to the building.

The renovation also included the construction of a grand staircase, a public elevator for the main lobby, skyway and parking area, a prisoner elevator and new detention areas.

Demolition, hazardous waste removal, new plumbing, fire protection, mechanical and electrical systems, and architectural revisions and upgrades for the new and renovated spaces were also added.

Halfway through the project, building mechanical and electrical system replacement was added to the plan as they were nearing replacement age. With the building already vacated to speed construction, this was seen as an opportune time for replacement.

Funding was then secured for the renovation of the remaining 240,000 square feet of the building. The U.S. Congress for the Mechanical, Electrical and Plumbing Prospectus Development Study provided $25 million in funding.

This additional funding allowed for the renovation of five existing Bankruptcy and Magistrate Court courtrooms, the renovation and expansion of the judge's chambers and office space needed to support the new court functions.

Building security systems were also expanded, making the building and site compliant with requirements for federal buildings post September 11 as well as with the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Another goal of the renovation was to achieve LEED Silver certification. The project had to meet minimum prerequisites in erosion control, systems commissioning, energy performance, CFC management, indoor air quality and tobacco smoke control.

Other LEED renovations included adding a reflective roof membrane to lower ambient site temperature and decrease the impact on the microclimate and habitat; removing turf grass from the site to reduce water usage by 33,230 gallons per year and improving energy savings through lighting and temperature controls, occupancy sensors, air volume controls, and high-efficiency pumps, motors and fans. In addition, a recycling program was implemented during the construction of the project, which resulted in more than 65 percent of all construction debris being recycled.

NorthMarq hired to oversee 1.35 million square feet of Minneapolis properties

by Jim BrubakerMinneapolis-St. Paul

NorthMarq has been hired to provide property management services to more than 1.35 million square feet of properties owned by Regency Centers, Tanurb Development, Inc., and Baceline Investments in Minneapolis.

Regency's assignment includes three properties totaling 623,000 square feet. These properties include the 185,000-square-foot Apple Valley Square in Apple Valley, Minn., the 95,000-square-foot Colonial Square in Wayzata, Minn., and the 343,000-square-foot Rockford Road Plaza in Plymouth, Minn.

Tanurb Development, Inc.'s, property assignments total 591,000 square feet. They include the 260,000-square-foot Burnsville Marketplace in Burnsville, Minn., the 148,000-square-foot Rosedale Marketplace in Roseville, Minn., and the 183,000-square-foot Rosedale Commons, also located in Roseville, Minn.

NorthMarq will also manage and lease Baceline Investments Westpoint Business Center in Plymouth, Minn. The five-building office/industrial complex totals 160,000 square feet.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Coping as diners tighten belts

By BILL WARD, Star Tribune
October 8, 2008


Leave it to the ever-blunt Brenda Langton to provide the most candid assessment of the economic downturn's effect on the local restaurant scene:
"It's scary for everyone," said Langton, chef/owner of two Minneapolis restaurants. "There's no question we've felt the effects."
Langton, who has owned Cafe Brenda for more than two decades and opened Spoonriver two years ago, has seen some tough times, "but nothing quite like this." She cites the loyalty of Cafe Brenda customers and Spoonriver's proximity to the Guthrie Theater and its nightly crowds as the prime factors in her places "doing OK."
People are still eating out just as much as last year, many local restaurateurs say. But customers are downsizing, ordering fewer entrees and more small plates to share or cutting back on their wine and spirits purchases.
"People are buying just as much wine as before," said Mark Marchionda, wine director at the upscale Italian restaurant I Nonni in Lilydale, "but they're spending 10 to 15 percent less on it." Several other local restaurant officials said they are serving just as many customers these days, but the revenue per customer is down.
Restaurants also are downsizing themselves. Skyrocketing food and fuel prices make it almost impossible to cut prices on particular dishes. So Langton looked at entrees in a different way, removing the $29 strip steak from Spoonriver's menu and replacing it with a $20 flank steak. Other restaurants have added more appetizers, and everyone has become more flexible about customers sharing dishes.
That makes sense when even the First Family is eating family-style. When Laura Bush dined at Mission American Kitchen in Minneapolis during last month's Republican National Convention, she and her table of seven shared a couple of salads and four entrees.
The scaling-back is even happening in Edina, where Louisa Eifrig Pineault said that her daughter's college tuition, "coupled with the rising costs of just about everything, have caused our dinner habits to do a 180 degree turn. ... If we do go out to eat, we split entrees, don't order appetizers, and skip the alcohol. More often than not, however, we'll do take-out instead of a sit-down dinner."
Pineault said that up until this year, her family ate a few times a month at the Red Pepper in Richfield. "Now, we've given up eating at the restaurant completely and only order take-out once a month, if that. It's just too expensive to eat out, once we factor in the rising cost of entrees, the waiter's tip, and the cost of a bottle of wine with dinner.
"The restaurant owner looks wistful every time we come in, wondering aloud why she doesn't see us anymore. I haven't got the heart to tell her we simply can't afford it."

Here's the beef
Given the state of the economy, it's hardly surprising that high-end restaurateurs have been thinking smaller and more casual. Several eateries recently opened by the Twin Cities' top chefs have downsized in terms of prices, if not ambition, with great success.
Stewart Woodman's new place, Heidi's in south Minneapolis, has no entrees over $20, no shortage of culinary flourishes and no tables available for the next several weekends.
In June 2007, Alex Roberts opened Brasa, where meals cost less than half as much as those at his flagship Restaurant Alma. It has been so successful -- often exceeding 400 customers a day -- that Roberts is looking to open a second Brasa on St. Paul's Grand Avenue.
When the spendy La Belle Vie moved from Stillwater to the outskirts of downtown Minneapolis, it gained something just as important as the upscale urban clientele: a spacious lounge that's more informal and inexpensive. "We needed to do this," said co-owner Josh Thoma. "We had a hallway with a few chairs in it in Stillwater."
Having a more casual adjoining space has also been a boon for Lucia's in Minneapolis and Heartland in St. Paul, both of which added hugely successful wine bars. (Lucia Watson subsequently opened an always-packed takeout place down the block.)
In the past few months Thoma and chef/co-owner Tim McKee have opened two lower-priced restaurants, Smalley's Caribbean Barbeque & Pirate Bar in Stillwater and Barrio, a tequila bar with Mexican food in downtown Minneapolis. The economy was a factor but not the only one, Thoma noted.
"We already have restaurants at higher price points," Thoma said, "so it made sense to do restaurants that won't compete with ourselves.
"Plus there's only so many people on a given night who are looking for a fine-dining experience. But there are a lot of people on a given night looking for a casual dining spot."
High-end mainstays such as La Belle Vie and Alma are sailing along, their owners say, luring clients who are relatively immune to the faltering economy. In a town that would seem to have a glut of expense-account steakhouses, not only are the holdovers (Morton's, Ruth's Chris, Capital Grille) still going strong, but the ranks have been further swelled by the carnivore-crazy chain Fogo de Chao, packed since opening 17 months ago, and the Strip Club in St. Paul.
Meanwhile, Manny's recent move from the Hyatt Regency to another Minneapolis hotel, the new W, has brought a boon in business to an already-successful beef (and baked-potatoes-bigger-than-your-head) emporium. The lone struggler in that category, insiders say, has been Seven the Steakhouse (formerly r. Norman's), which has undergone management changes and failed to draw the kind of crowds that its posh upstairs nightclub lures.

Only the smart survive
Many observers expressed surprise that so few restaurants have closed. The most conspicuous local closings have been St. Paul's Zander's Cafe and three Uptown Minneapolis restaurants, Campiello, Giorgio's and jP's American Bistro. Lease problems and Giorgio Cherubini's retirement were significant factors in those closings.
But this year has had nothing like the spate of closings in the summer of 2007, when three deluxe downtown St. Paul restaurants -- Fhima's, A Rebours and Margaux -- closed within a matter of months.
Since then, though, pricey chef-driven restaurants have continued to open, including the 21st-century supper club Red Stag, Sanctuary and Meritage (in A Rebours' old space). Not surprisingly, more moderately priced eateries now occupy the spaces at Fhima's (Pop!!) and Margaux (Sawatdee).
There's also no shortage of new upscale restaurants at splashy hotels, including Bank, Porter & Frye and restaurant Max. But their success is largely tied to the hotel's fortunes.
"White-tablecloth places are great for a hotel, but most everybody else is having to downsize," said Scott Davis, owner of the Minneapolis wine bar Toast. "That's why you see places like 112 Eatery and Red Stag that are really trying to cater to the 'come back again this week' crowd and not the 'we'll see you in two or three months' crowd."
Restaurants also are not buying as much wine at medium or high price points, local distributors agree, which creates a trickle-down effect for those businesses.
But people have to eat, and they want to drink (tough times hardly change that fact of life), so smart restaurateurs figure to survive.
"I know for a fact that Americans are not cooking as much as they used to," said Roberts, "and I knew when I opened Brasa that we were headed for some tougher economic times. So if you have an easier price point, that will be a draw. It also helps to have a menu that you can eat from every day."

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Shea Receives International Award for Macy’s Gourmet Food Package Designs



MINNEAPOLIS (October 7, 2008) – This week, the 38th Annual Creativity Awards named Shea, Inc. as the Silver winner in the Food & Beverage Packaging Category. The winning entry was for package design developed by Shea for Macy’s line of gourmet food products. The designs included packaging for Macy’s private label lines of gourmet coffees, salad dressings and wines.

Established in 1970, The Creativity Annual Awards is based in Louisville, KY, and is one of the longest running international advertising and graphic design competitions in the world. A print, web, advertising and media design competition, each year the judges choose the best from all over the world to be reproduced in the 400-page Creativity Awards Annual. This year the 38th Annual Creativity Awards received a record 2,800 entries from over 44 countries and 45 U.S. states. Judges from some of the United States' most prestigious design firms evaluated the work produced by their peers and students.

Susan Donahue, Shea’s creative director and lead designer on the Macy’s project, noted, “We have worked with Macy’s for many years on designs of their food service locations. We have gotten to know their brand so well that it was fun for us to extend it to their gourmet food packaging. The designs have resonated well with the client and with consumers, and now with this award, we’re excited to have our work recognized by our peers.”

Shea’s winning package designs can be viewed at: http://www.shealink.com/our_work/case_studies/macys/. Winners will be honored at the 1st Annual Creativity Awards Gala to be held in Louisville, KY - home of the Creativity Annual Awards. A full list of 38th Creativity Annual Awards winners can be found at: http://www.creativityawards.com/past_competition.html.

Shea, Inc., now celebrating its 30th year, is a marketing and design firm integrating expertise in marketing, architecture, and interior design. Shea blends diverse perspectives, skills, cultures and knowledge into solid creative strategy for clients. Shea’s client list includes Macy’s, TCF National Bank, Morton’s The Steakhouse, Wells Fargo and Midcontinent Communications. For more information on Shea, please contact Andy McDermott at 612.594.4245 or visit our Web site http://www.shealink.com/.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Shea's Newest Member



Shea welcomes "Ellie" to our family.
6lbs, 6oz
19.5"

Born Tuesday, September 30 at 4:44 p.m.


Family is doing great and no signs of irregular heartbeat since birth.


Congrats to the Moe Family!

First Glimpse: Barrio

Check out our website www.shealink.com

Friday, September 5, 2008
Minnesota Monthly

Went to Barrio the other night, and it was fabulous. The corn soup was silky, full of fresh kernels of perfect summer corn, enriched by blue cheese and made elaborate and complex with herb oil—it was wonderful. The guacamole was the best I’ve had in my life, just lush and satiny, and the tortilla chips are sturdy, crisp, house-made creations dusted with cumin, chili, and sea-salt. I’d rather have them that most French fries, which is saying something. I’ll have a full review in November based on multiple visits and putting them through the full critical rigamarole, but if you’re the kind of person given to rushing to the hot new thing, rush on over. Shockingly, for a place where most everything is priced from $3.50 to $7, (the menu is mostly small plates, not unlike Solera) they take reservations. The cocktails were amazing too. All hail Johnny Michaels! Like I said, I’ll have more—and more reasoned critical evaluation—soon, but my gut-level first impression was that I’ve only seen a very few restaurants open this strongly: 112, Alma, and La Belle Vie. And I feel very hopeful about it all.

And now because this entry seems kind of short, I’ll close with this: You can buy a bumper sticker on cafepress.com that reads: “I’d rather be eating pheasant.” How weird is that? Also one that reads: “Have you eaten your grouse today?” So, if you’re itching to get bird-hunting season under way, via the bumper of your car, now you know.

Barrio
925 Nicollet Mall
Minneapolis, MN
612-333-9953
Barriotequila.com