Categories

Folklore and the Curse of 36 MLK, Jr. Blvd

Straight out of a Harry Potter saga, isn’t it?

It is absolutely fair to say this one caught most of us by surprise.  If you believe everything you hear, that would include some of the employees.

Folklore, an attractive and relatively popular fine dining-ish restaurant Downtown Savannah announced it would be closing for good on Tuesday, bringing to an end a very short 6 month run on the corner of MLK and Congress Streets.

“Very short” is being generous. 6 months in restaurant time is the opposite of dog years. In a lot of cases, it takes you 6 months to learn all of your co-workers names.

The announcement came suddenly and as a total surprise to some of their regulars. Patrons with reservations were notified via email that their reservation was cancelled and the restaurant was closed for good effective June 20th.

I have found it fascinating over the years at how quickly ‘clicks’ will race to a story about a restaurant closing. Everyone wants to know the gossip.  Everyone thinks they have the answers as to why, when the reality is only the people signing the checks inside know the real reasons why a business shuts it’s doors. 

In this case, it appears to be a simple case of economics. A simple statement on Folklore’s website (above) thanks the community for it’s support then makes reference to rising food and labor costs. Issues that plague every restaurant in America, true, but sometimes a new one is unable to withstand dramatic changes in the landscape.  Every investor out there gets tired of scratching checks when the return you are seeing is minimal.  With the threshold for pain different for every person on earth.

One of the most popular restaurants in Savannah feared failure in year one.  “We didn’t know if we were going to make it almost a year in” is how that restaurant’s owner has put it to me.  “Eventually, everything fell in place.”

That restaurant opened pre-2020. That was before the cost of labor went through the roof.  That was before thin profit margins found themselves getting dramatically thinner.

So many people think owning a restaurant is as simple as finding a spot, cooking some food and counting your millions. Any restaurant owner reading this right now just had a laugh. You’re welcome.

So it would appear that Folklore underperformed, which happens. What caught me a little off guard by the announcement was my conversation with Executive Chef Ryan Whyte Buck back in the Fall. Like so many chefs, Chef wanted to try something different but also offer the masses something they would embrace.

As such, the reviews were mixed at Folklore with some people calling the menu ‘too avant garde’ and others saying it was good and/or great. Chef Ryan is talented and creative. It would have been nice to see him get more than 6 months to figure it out.

Meanwhile, Folklore’s closing brings to an end another chapter in the ongoing horror story whose working title is “36 MLK, Jr Blvd”. So many have tried to make something work there with very little success. 

So many have tried and failed that the cynics will tell you the space is ‘cursed.’ A lazy take, of course.  The reality is-from this seat anyway- that the demos that frequent that micro-section of downtown don’t necessarily mix with higher end dining and cocktails.  There are too many such spots downtown to make going ‘all the way’ to Congress and MLK a viable option.

Let’s hope someone figures it out and dials it down a notch or two on that corner sooner rather than later. Then we can all get back to eating and liking.

# # #

Share Now :

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email
Reddit

1 thought on “Folklore and the Curse of 36 MLK, Jr. Blvd”

  1. It would have been helpful to illustrate the title of your article with the names of the previous tenants of the “cursed” restaurant address.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Categories

Sign up for
our Newsletter!

Categories
May 2024
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Follow Us On

Scroll to Top