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Starbucks Reserve
IndustryCoffee
Founded2010; 14 years ago (2010)
Parent Starbucks
Website www.starbucksreserve.com

Starbucks Reserve is a program by the international coffeehouse chain Starbucks. The program involves operation of worldwide roasteries; currently six are in operation. Also part of the program are 28 coffee bars preparing Starbucks Reserve products, what Starbucks considers its rarest and best-quality coffees, usually single-origin coffees. Some Starbucks Reserve coffee is also sold in about 1,500 of the chain's traditional outlets.

Map of Starbucks Reserve roasteries

History

The program began as Starbucks desired to compete in the high-end coffee market, competing against premium coffee retailers like Stumptown Coffee Roasters, Dillanos Coffee Roasters and Blue Bottle Coffee. [1]

Starbucks began its Starbucks Reserve program in 2010 through online sales and a small number of its retail locations, selling small-batch arabica coffees. Later, the company opened its first Reserve location, a three-story store in Latin America, solely selling Colombian coffee. The first Starbucks Reserve roastery opened in December 2014 in Seattle. [2]

Types

A Starbucks Reserve Bar in Vancouver

Starbucks Reserve includes three different types of locations: the "Starbucks Reserve Roastery", the "Reserve Bar", and the "Reserve Store". The roasteries, usually tens of thousands of square feet (thousands of square meters), are often described as a theme park experience, including coffee bars with tastings, cocktail bars, areas to observe the roasting and brewing processes, areas to purchase food, and local artwork throughout. The facilities also roast, package, and ship coffee to stores in their regions. [3]

The company currently operates a total of six roasteries, in Seattle (opened 2014), Shanghai (2017), Milan (2018), New York City (2018), Tokyo (2019), and Chicago (2019). The company initially planned to open at least 20 roasteries, though it announced in 2019 that it would be scaling back its plans, with Chicago being the last roastery to be built at the moment. [4] [5]

Reserve Bars are traditional Starbucks locations that sell some Starbucks Reserve products, supplied by a regional roastery. There are 43 locations, all of which include the regular Starbucks menu, and also have a coffee bar for a similar experience to the coffee bars in the roasteries. [3] There are currently approximately five Reserve Stores in operation, with one located in Starbucks' headquarters, Starbucks Center, in Seattle. Other stores are located in New York, Mumbai, Prague and Shanghai. These stores sell merchandise, food and drink such as Reserve Coffee, Princi food items, and locally-unique merchandise similar to that of the roasteries. [6] [7] [8]

Roasteries

Seattle

Seattle roastery building

The first Starbucks Reserve roastery opened in December 2014 in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Seattle. [2] It has 15,000 square feet (1,400 m2) and is rumored to have cost about $20 million. The roastery includes a split-flap display, a departure board style common in 20th century railway stations. The board was created by Solari di Udine and displays the coffees being roasted. [1]

Shanghai

Shanghai roastery

The roastery in Shanghai, China, is located in the HKRI Taikoo Hui mixed-use development, on the luxury shopping strip Nanjing Road. It opened in December 2017 and was the largest Starbucks location in the world at that time, since surpassed by the Chicago roastery. The Shanghai roastery has 30,000 square feet (2,800 m2) between two stories. It is typically fully packed with customers, with lines out the door typical in peak times. [9]

The Shanghai roastery has a roasting facility, three coffee bars, a Teavana tea bar, and an augmented reality feature designed by Alibaba: information about coffees and the roasting process viewable by opening the company's Taobao app and pointing it in different places. The store also includes a marketplace, a wine and beer tasting area, a bar for scooping bags of beans to purchase, and places to sample different coffees throughout the store. Similar to other roasteries, a two-story bronze cask sits at the center of the store. The cask is decorated with 1,000 traditional Chinese stamps, hand-engraved, telling stories of the company and coffee. The cask weighs 40 short tons (36 t), and holds beans roasted in the facility, which are periodically dispersed through pipes around the facility for use. One of the roastery's coffee bars is 88 feet (27 m) long, the longest Starbucks coffee bar in existence. Similar to Seattle, the building also features an old-fashioned split-flap display board, showing which varieties are being roasted, and information about their flavors and origin. Many of the roastery's beans were grown in China's Yunnan province. The roastery also includes a Princi location, selling pizzas and focaccia. A coffee library includes books on the history of coffee, brewing methods, coffee art, and the history of Starbucks. The Teavana bar is popular due to China's traditional tea culture; the bar has a wide variety of teas, brewing methods, and tea-based drinks. [9]

Milan

Milan roastery

The roastery in Milan is located in the Palazzo Broggi [ it], formerly the city's stock exchange and main post office building. The building sits in the Piazza Cordusio, a plaza in the center of the city. The roastery opened on September 7, 2018, becoming the first of any Starbucks in Italy, and the first and only roastery in Europe. It is the largest Starbucks in Europe, with 25,000 square feet (2,300 m2). [10] [11] [12] The location was chosen as the city of Milan was where Howard Schultz visited in 1983, inspiring him to add espresso drinks to Starbucks, develop cafés, and create the coffeehouse chain out of the single original location. [12]

The interior was designed considering its location. Most Starbucks locations utilize warm materials like wood, rather than stone surfaces. For the Milan location, an exception was made with the installation of Calacatta marble counters, due to marble's commonplace use in high-end Italian coffee shops. The counters have a radiant heating system to keep them warm. [12]

The location has a main bar with seven different coffees, a self-service bean bar, a wood-fired oven bakery, a Princi foodservice area, a retail space, and an "Arriviamo" cocktail bar serving coffee-based cocktails and Italian drinks like the Aperol Spritz. The main bar has an affogato station, unique to the Milan location. The affogato ice cream is made to order with liquid nitrogen, served with an espresso shot. The coffee roasted in the building is used in Starbucks locations in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. [10]

New York City

The New York location is in Manhattan's neighborhood of Chelsea, it opened on December 13, 2018. [13] It occupies the first floor of 61 Ninth Avenue. The location has 23,000 square feet (2,100 m2), and includes a coffee roastery, two coffee bars, a cocktail bar, bakery, and a terrarium. The bakery, operated by Princi, has baked goods, pizzas, salads, and breads. The cocktail bar, a branded "Arriviamo Bar", has coffee- and tea-based cocktails. The interior ceiling has artistic squares and rectangles resembling the building's exterior architecture. The terrarium resembles Hacienda Alsacia, a coffee farm in Costa Rica, and the first and only farm owned by Starbucks. [14]

Tokyo

Tokyo roastery

The Tokyo roastery opened in Tokyo's Nakameguro district on February 28, 2019. The roastery has about 32,000 square feet (3,000 m2), and was designed by Kengo Kuma and built with Japanese cedar. It is the only Reserve Roastery building purpose-built; the other roasteries repurposed existing buildings. The interior has four floors, each including decorative elements of Japanese culture. The first floor holds the main coffee bar, while the second floor holds a Teavana tea bar offering 18 different teas and tea-based beverages. The third-floor cocktail bar, branded a "Arriviamo Bar", has coffee- and tea-infused cocktails, Japanese versions of classic cocktails, and nonalcoholic cocktails. The fourth floor has the "Amu Inspiration Lounge", an event space planned to be certified as a training location by the Specialty Coffee Association of Japan. [15]

Central to the space is a 56-foot-tall (17 m) copper cask, made of 121 copper plates hand-hammered in the Japanese tsuchime technique. The cask holds roasted coffee beans, allowing them to settle and gas to escape before brewing or packaging. Around the cask are 2,100 copper cherry blossoms suspended from the ceiling, an homage to the nearby Meguro River, popular for its numerous blossoming cherry trees. Extending from the cask are copper pipes that deliver coffee beans across different areas of the store. The facility has two roasters, a 260-pound (118 kg) Probat G-120 and a 35-pound (16 kg) Probat P25 roaster, able to roast up to 4,000 pounds (1,800 kg) of coffee each day. The coffee is used in the roastery and shipped to retailers throughout Japan. [15]

Chicago

Crate & Barrel flagship store in Chicago, 2004

The Chicago roastery, which opened November 15, 2019, is the largest Starbucks location in the world and latest roastery to be built. The building at 646 North Michigan Avenue on the Magnificent Mile has five stories at 35,000 square feet (3,300 m2). [16]

Reception

An article for Business Insider described Starbucks Reserve as more expensive than regular locations, and more like an "art studio" than a cafe, due to the art work lining the walls. [17]

References

  1. ^ a b Stephanie Strom (December 5, 2014). "Starbucks, Facing a Saturated Market, Looks to the High End - The New York Times". The New York Times. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
  2. ^ a b Harris, Jenn (September 5, 2014). "Starbucks gets fancy with Reserve roastery, tasting room, coffees". Los Angeles Times.
  3. ^ a b Campbell-Schmitt, Adam (December 20, 2018). "Roastery, Reserve Bar, Regular Starbucks: What's the Difference?". Food&Wine.
  4. ^ Stern, Gary. "Starbucks' Reserve Roastery Is Spacious And Trendy, So Why Is It Slowing Down Expansion?". Forbes. Retrieved May 5, 2021.
  5. ^ Danziger, Pamela N. "Starbucks Makes The Right Call, Scales Back Plans For 1,000 Upscale Reserve Stores". Forbes. Retrieved May 5, 2021.
  6. ^ Guerrero, Rafael. "Starbucks Reserve — one of four in the world — opens in downtown Naperville; serving pizza, beer and wine". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved May 5, 2021.
  7. ^ "Exclusive: Starbucks India gets its first Reserve Store in Mumbai". Vogue India. October 17, 2022. Retrieved January 25, 2023.
  8. ^ Chang, Brittany. "I went to Starbucks' newest flagship store in the Empire State Building and had one of the best coffees I've ever tasted, but I probably won't be back". Business Insider. Retrieved January 25, 2023.
  9. ^ a b Jacobs, Harrison (April 22, 2018). "Starbucks Reserve Roastery Shanghai is world's biggest Starbucks". Business Insider. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
  10. ^ a b Romeo, Claudia (April 6, 2019). "Inside Italy's only Starbucks that's the biggest in Europe". Insider. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
  11. ^ Food & Drink. "Largest Starbucks in the World is Opening in Chicago This November". Thrillist. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
  12. ^ a b c Kellogg, Craig (September 6, 2018). "Starbucks Uses Design to Entice Coffee Lovers in Milan". Architectural Digest. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
  13. ^ "Starbucks Opens 23,000-Square-Foot Immersive Coffee Destination in New York". Starbucks Stories & News.
  14. ^ Gannon, Devin (December 13, 2018). "Starbucks is opening a massive 'immersive coffee experience' with a cocktail bar in Chelsea". 6sqft. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
  15. ^ a b Williamson, Claire (March 9, 2019). "Starbucks' Reserve Roastery Tokyo is a 'coffee wonderland'". The Japan Times. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
  16. ^ Waxman, Naomi (January 6, 2020). "The Early Word on the World's Largest Starbucks". Eater Chicago. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  17. ^ Nazario, Marina (February 23, 2016). "Starbucks is opening hundreds of premium stores where the cheapest coffee is $4 — we visited one to see what it's like". Business Insider. Retrieved June 13, 2020.

External links