At a time when most New Hampshire businesses were closed and Main Streets looked like ghost towns, Jonny Norris was preparing to open a new location.
Norris, who owns Montshire Pediatric Dentistry in Keene, was in the midst of moving into a new location eight times the size of his original spot in Claremont.
While the thought of opening a new business seemed unheard of and even unlikely when only โessentialโ businesses had open signs in their windows, Montshire Pediatric Dentistry and several other New Hampshire businesses decided to do just that.
Although they were all in different phases of being ready to open, they faced roadblocks and apprehension over whether launching a business during a down economy and a global pandemic would be the smartest move.
โWe considered (delaying our opening),โ said Jonny Norris, owner of Montshire Pediatric Dentistry, who opened a larger location in Keene in the first week of June. โHowever, we were all in. Due to the governor and professional governance, we discontinued our normal operations for eight weeks (at the start of the pandemic). Construction was considered essential and we had already obtained all of our permits, so we focused all of our energy on opening the new practice.โ
Norris, whose original location is in Claremont, signed a letter of intent to take over the former Andyโs Cycles location on Winchester Street in August 2019. The renovations were going smoothly until the Zoning Parking Variance meeting that was scheduled in February got bumped to March, then April. That delayed re-paving the parking lot, which in turn slightly inconvenienced the roofers, plumbers and other workers, delaying progress.
โYou plan for everything but (during the pandemic) you have to expect the unexpected,โ Norris said. โEvery day something happened but we dealt with it. I had to be prepared for a new set of problems every day. What might be a problem today may not be tomorrowโs (problem).โ
Lenny and Nancy Abreu had always dreamed of owning a Golden Corral, a buffet chain that is popular around the country but scarce in New England. When construction started the first week of February their dream was finally coming to fruition, and the first Golden Corral in the Granite State was scheduled to open in March in Manchester.
Then restaurants had to change course in light of the coronavirus. The Abreus, along with co-owner Steve Leary, are now unsure of when the restaurant will open.
โI donโt have the words for (what has happened); itโs frustrating,โ Lenny Abreu said. โIโve run restaurants during 9/11, SARS, H1N1 … and Iโve never seen anything like this.
Unfortunately even though restaurants are now open to take out, curbside pickup and outdoor seating, those donโt line up with Golden Corralโs buffet concept. Although construction went well, Abreu is still waiting to welcome his first customers. He is hoping for June or July but is realistic it may be August or September, pending the stateโs OK.
โI have mixed feelings,โ said Abreu, who said he may have to start with a family style menu and wait service when he opens, rather than the restaurantโs signature buffet. โYou work all of your life for something and put everything you have into it but then you are told by someone else you canโt do this or that.โ
Abreu is confident that he and other restaurants could safely reopen.
โI donโt want anyone to get sick – my first goal is everyone being safe. But I feel restaurants are so far ahead of other stores as far sanitation and cleaning procedures that we should be allowed to be open. We get spot checks from the Board of Health four times a year and are constantly under the microscope to make sure we adhere to sanitation and safety procedures. But other โessentialโ stores are fine to open.โ
The Abreus, who also own Nancyโs Diner in Manchester, have been positive throughout the roadblocks and speed bumps. The diner isnโt equipped for curbside pickup so theyโve done some work inside and have been making sandwiches for frontline staff at the Department of Veterans Affairs Manchester Medical Center.
Another new restaurant in Manchester seems uniquely equipped to meet this moment.
Good & Planty is Tom Puskarichโs virtual restaurant endeavor that opened May 1, only one month later than originally hoped. Good & Planty is a plant-based, delivery-only restaurant that uses apps like Grubhub and UberEats. It uses the kitchen from Puskarichโs other culinary option, Restoration Cafe, also in Manchester.
While sit down restaurants obviously have been hit hard, delivery is seeing huge upticks in usage. The timing really worked out for Puskarich and Good & Planty, which was planned as a delivery business even before the pandemic.
โI feel extremely fortunate that we had something in the pipeline,โ Puskarich said. โI didnโt didnโt have to start from scratch. [Good & Planty] was tailor-made for the new dining realities at this moment.โ
Still, Puskarich wouldnโt want to repeat the experience of opening a business during a global shutdown.
โI donโt want to have to do this again. Weโve been blessed and fortunate we put ourselves in a position to react to the current market and survive,โ he said. โWeโve been able to keep our heads above water better than most.โ
Tiny Bully, a boutique marketing agency in Greenland, also had a pretty seamless launch. Then again, the business, founded in 1986 at MicroArts, was already established and the rebranding didnโt involve any construction or renovation.
โWe were well-equipped to work remotely and well-equipped to maintain our service levels working from home,โ said Danielle OโNeil, president of Tiny Bully. โMy advice to other companies (opening during this time) is every business is different and they have to do what is best for them.โ
The pandemic did alter Tiny Bullyโs schedule, forcing the business to unveil its new look gradually.
โWe had to start slowly, a couple pages on the website, then a couple case studies and creating more collateral,โ OโNeil said. Still, slow and steady is working for Tiny Bully.
โSince the pandemic โฆ not only have we been busy with our current clients but weโve got many new clients as well,โ OโNeil said.
Private businesses arenโt the only ones to open during the pandemic. The New Hampshire Liquor Commission opened its 77th outlet location in Tilton four months early in late May, and announced that another store in Epsom is more than 30% complete, due to open in fall 2020. A location in Concord is on schedule to start construction at the end of the year.
Chairman Joseph Mollica explained that with the Liquor Commission contributing up to $800 million to the stateโs coffers in 2020 – through wholesale and retail sales – it was imperative that new retails outlets opened as planned.
Even though it is a state agency Mollica and his team had to follow the same restrictions as any other business.
โWhen the pandemic hit our goal was to stay on course,โ said Mollica. โWe wanted to keep the projects on track and keep the revenue going for New Hampshire. Weโre a business and we donโt lose sight of what we are trying to do and what we statutorily are supposed to be doing.โ
ย
These articles are being shared by partners in The Granite State News Collaborative. For more information visit collaborativenh.org.
