by IgnoranceIsBliss » Thu 29 May 2008, 09:37:45
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JJ', 'm')y next door neighbor quit driving crosscountry and one day he said come over to my house and look at this. (about six months ago). His wife had inherited a bunch of money, and he found a pizza resturaunt in a college town near here for sale, on the internet. (Pop. here is 5,000.....college town nearby 50,000.)....He said what do you think (he had already bought it). I thought rising wheat, cheese, energy, etc. prices but i said nothing. For the next several months he worked day and nite getting a nearby building ready. I can only imaging how much it cost, new wiring, plumbing, parking lot and stripping, on and on.....He opened about a month ago (we already have THREE pizza resturaunts in town). As near as I can tell, he's always packed. We've eaten there twice to be polite, but its 40.00 for two adults and two children, and can't afford it anymore. He's lost about 75 pounds, he looks really bad. I wonder how many pizzas he's made?
My husband worked on and off at pizza restaurants since he was 13 years old. The last time was 4 years ago when he took a second job under the table as a pizza maker to pay off credit card debt. It was hell, but he paid off the whole $10,000 that year. Owning a pizza place is just about the worst job you could get. It's difficult to find anyone decent to work for you (the place mentioned above ended up getting an illegal mexican) and the hours are just about 24/7. You end up working for about $2 an hour. I don't see how your neighbor's place can stay open for much longer with those prices. One of our neighbors closed his small pizza place last summer.
About the restaurant market in my area - A new Chili's just opened about 20 minutes from here in a big new shopping center with Target, Home Depot, Office Max, Pet Smart, etc.
Starbucks is opening a location inside one of our local grocery stores. I've noticed a few restaurant closures (small places), but most of them have a sign saying they are re-opening soon under new management. Maybe people are desperate to make it work because they feel they can't find any other job?
Otherwise, I have noticed that we have a LOT of empty retail space in shopping centers all around town. This has been going on for about a year now. These are nice centers with big anchor stores (Publix grocery, Bed, Bath, and Beyond, etc). The Publix plaza has about 6 empty stores right now, some small and some pretty big. I sure would hate to be a shopping center owner right about now and going forward!