This piece answers some of the questions that were raised after the earlier announcement about the restaurants: Great Cooks (on the 8th floor) will remain, Arcadian Court (once renovated) will no longer be open for lunch, the new restaurant at ground level at Queen and Bay will be 4000 sq. ft.
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Change is in the air at the Bay
Peter Kuitenbrouwer February 14, 2011 – 9:02 am
National Post
Charles Houston, who is 80, ate fish & chips — $7.62 when you factor in his 10% senior’s discount — with silverware off a china plate, washed down with a glass of ice water, on Wednesday at the Cafe Bon Appetit, formerly known as the City View Cafe, on the eighth floor of the Hudson’s Bay Company store at Bay and Queen streets.
Beside him on the creamcoloured formica table lay his raccoon-fur hat, made in Canada, purchased downstairs in the Bay’s hat department. He read the newspaper and enjoyed the afternoon light filtering in from plate-glass windows, which look north and offer a remarkable roof-line view of the Richardsonian Romanesque pile, in red sandstone, that is Old City Hall.
“I think people of all ages like this cafeteria,” said Mr. Houston, who has come here since he moved from Montreal, in 1960. “On weekends I see young people with their children, and of course it’s very popular when they have parades, so a lot of people will be sorry to see this place close down.
“Being up like this, you get a feeling that you are away from the hurly-burly and the cut and thrust of the street.”
Change is coming to the Bay. Oliver & Bonacini, the restaurant company that now employs 900 people, mainly in Toronto, has signed a deal, in partnership with Compass Group Canada (a U.S.-based multinational whose clients range from prisons to the White House) to supply food to 24 Bay stores across Canada. The project starts April 1. The plan involves closing two of the Bay’s three eighth-floor eateries (the cafe and the Arcadian Court) to the lunch
crowd, though Great Chefs on 8, whose windows face west, will remain open.
As a replacement, Oliver & Bonacini plans a 4,000-square-foot cafe on the ground level of the Bay, on the corner of Queen and Bay streets, replacing the Timothy’s that is there now. The cafe will serve light meals, takeout, coffee, and breakfast, lunch and dinner.
“We are going to be putting together the strongest culinary team that I have ever assembled,” Peter Oliver, co-owner of the company with Michael Bonacini, told me yesterday, when we met at the Toronto Board of Trade, where his company provides the food.
“There’s an art to making a sandwich. I want people to say, ‘Look at the quality of those sandwiches.’ And we want to offer it at a reasonable price, $7 or $8.”
The Robert Simpson Company Ltd. opened the Arcadian Court in 1929. An ad from the period hanging on the wall notes, “its brillliant modern originality is expressed in the decorated columns, the mezzanine cornices and the iron ballustrades, crafted in Modern French fashion.” Upstairs was The Grill, “A place for men to dine … in club-like, masculine surroundings they may enjoy a business chat, good food and a smoke.”
Mr. Oliver, who began his career in Toronto by opening Oliver’s Old-Fashioned Bakery, on Yonge Street north of Eglinton, in 1978, said the Arcadian Court and the cafe to its north will become a “state-of-the-art event centre, for business events, weddings and parties. (O & B has 12 weddings booked this summer at the Board of Trade.)
“You’ve gotta let your imagination run wild,” he said Wednesday, standing in the Arcadian Court, a space with a three-storey, vaulted ceiling, for which he plans a $4-million renovation “to make it more the way it was before.
“You could do a party here with Texas rockabilly music and line dancing. You could have the Toronto Symphony. You could have an Elvis revival.”
But you will no longer be able to do lunch.
“Whether we like it or not, the world is changing,” Mr. Oliver said. “We can’t sit there like Canute and expect the tide to go the other way.” He said that in contrast to Winnipeg, where locals are up in arms about the disappearance of the Bay’s Paddle Room restaurant, the reaction in Toronto has been muted. “There has been no uproar or backlash here. I don’t believe that cafeteria is the kind of landmark that it could have been.”
He is excited by the opportunities of the spot. “If you look at the Bay, that sucker fills an entire city block,” he said. “We will be baking in that location. We will be making chocolate. We will have our own ice cream.” And more, he promises, adding with a twinkle in his eye, “the whole thing is a work in progress.”