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Night Shift Brewing, Level99 eye Natick Mall for ‘Willy Wonka meets Dungeons & Dragons’

June 22, 2020 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

The Natick Mall in early 2021 seeks to welcome Night Shift Brewing and Level99, which will join forces to offer an interactive “world of challenges” designed to get people off their butts to solve physical and mental games while enjoying food and beverages.

The remnants of Sears, whose 180,000 sq. ft. went dark in Natick Mall at the start of 2019, continue to be erased and replaced with anything but old-fashioned retail businesses.  Sports bar/arcade Dave & Busters arrived first, about a year ago. The Natick Planning Board this past week heard a pitch from the mall and its partners about Level99, which looks to take mall amusements to a whole new level (though the meeting was really just about the signage).


Update (6/14/21): Read our opening day review


Level99 is spearheaded by Matt DuPlessie, whose work through a company called 5 Wits you might be familiar with if you ever visited the now-defunct TOMB interactive space in the Fenway or the 20,000 Leagues or Espionage adventures at Patriot Place in Foxborough. Now DuPlessie & team, via engineering firm Box Fort of Norwood, are envisioning Level99 in 48,000 sq. ft. on the second level of the Natick Mall, which has been looking for non-apparel-based tenants for that space in re-imagining itself. Box Fort’s clients include museums and theme parks, to give you a sense of what you might be in for with Level99.

Level99 is a plan 4 years and $10 million in the making, according to DuPlessie.

The concept, of which a mock-up was shown at the meeting, would include 43 separate rooms, each clustered into small groups and featuring different games that groups of 2 to 6 people will have a few minutes to try to win. You might have to put black and white tiles together in a certain pattern, avoid stepping on “lava” as you solve a puzzle, or sequence colors and sounds, like with the old Simon game. DuPlessie described a diverse collection of themes, from ancient caves to modern art to a candy factory. The rooms will turn red and a buzzer will sound if you fail (you can try again).

Some games will be more public, or arena-like, with the opportunity to compete vs. others or to just spectate. Seventy-plus pieces of art, including works from local artists, will decorate the space and double as items in a scavenger hunt.

The idea is that you’ll pay $20 for an RFID wristband that will give you access to the game rooms. In all, there’s about 30 hours of play available to people.

Level99
Level99 rendering shown at Natick Planning Board meeting

 

Level99 mockup
Some Level99 challenges will be physical

 

DuPlessie, who began his career managing theme park projects in Florida, said that Level99 borrows heavily from video game mechanisms that people love to play on smartphones and computers, and transfers it to the physical world. He emphasized it is not a place to play video games or walk around in virtual reality goggles.

“This is get your rear off the couch, get up, get active, get into the space and play,” he said.

While this all might sound like fun, DuPlessie said partnering with Night Shift, the state’s #2 best-selling craft brewery, is what will help lure more people to the venue, entice them to stay a while, and encourage them to revisit. The target audience is young adults, say ages 21-39, but expect some hours that will allow younger participants, too.

For those of drinking age, a taproom somewhat separated from the fray will be accessible. For those who want to soak in the experience while eating and drinking, tables will be located in the middle of things.

Word of this Night Shift project comes on the heels of the brewery scrapping plans to open its “second ‘forever home'” in Philadelphia, a project that would have cost at least $10 million and was 4 years in planning. “It wasn’t meant to be. The COVID-19 pandemic shook our business to the core, and obviously almost everything outside of it. We’re lucky that we’re still in operation and able to see ourselves coming out of this crisis intact,” the owners wrote on their website in May.

Who needs Philly when you have Natick—plus Everett and Boston—anyway?

Back to the overall Level99 concept. Planning Board member Julian Munnich’s reaction to the plan summed things up nicely: “It was bound to happen, Willy Wonka meets Dungeons & Dragons.”

Level99
One proposed signage option shown at Planning Board meeting.

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Filed Under: Business, Food


Next up for Natick outdoor dining: Trend Pure Asian Cuisine, more Buttercup

June 20, 2020 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

Trend Pure Asian Cuisine, a Rte. 9 restaurant, and Buttercup in Natick Center, will have their applications seeking to allow outdoor service of alcoholic beverages considered by the Board of Selectmen this coming Wednesday.

Trend seeks a modest 3 tables for a total of 8 people. Buttercup, which already offers outdoor serve, looks to add capacity for another 32 diners on its patio and in an alley next to its building.

Frescafe and Station 5 Grille also have been given the town’s permission to offer outdoor dining (no booze), even as the state will now allow restaurants to start offering indoor dining next week if they meet safety protocols.

Dolphin Seafood, Eli’s and others have also been approved, and are already offering outdoor dining as patrons brave their way back into the world.


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Filed Under: Business, Restaurants



Jesamondo Salon & Spa at the forefront of safety

June 19, 2020 by Duncan Brown 1 Comment

Jesamondo
Matt Traiger, owner of Jesamondo, is looking forward to the June 22nd start of Phase 2, Part 2.

“Good to see you Matt, I had to get six inches off,” says a customer on her way out of Jesamondo Salon & Spa. Matt Traiger, owner of the business, returns the sentiment, and admits that he hasn’t been able to even get himself a cut yet. Since Jesamondo has been back up and running, customers desperate to get their hair back to a manageable length and shape have been coming in, glad to see their usual hairdressers rather than a member of their family armed with dull scissors.

At the moment, leaving Jesamondo is as easy as ever. It’s getting inside that’s a bit more complex. Outside the entrance to the long-time Natick salon and spa, located at 154 E. Central St., (regulars may remember when they were located in Wellesley) is a blackboard with a phone number. The message on the blackboard directs clients to give a call so that they may be greeted and let in by an employee. Be ready to get a quick scan via temperature reader to check if you’re running a fever.  

Inside, signs at the reception desk encourage social distancing, offer masks for sale, and inform customers that due to a “contactless payment system” they encourage the use of Venmo for tips. The hairdressers are donned in masks, gloves, goggles, and smocks, ensuring one more layer of protection.

Most importantly of all, however, is a brand-new hidden HVAC bio-defense system called the Synexis Microbial Reduction System. You can’t see the salon-safety system, because it’s tucked into air vents in the ceiling. The devices use humidity and oxygen to deliver safe levels of dry hydrogen peroxide  into the air. Proven to be effective against both surface and airborne contaminants such as viruses (including COVID-19, E. Coli, Staph, Norovirus, H1N1, Listeria, C.Diff), bacteria and mold, thirteen of the devices have been installed. It’s a system that has been scientifically proven and used for many years by professional athletic team, stadiums, and hospitals. Jesamondo is one of two salons in Massachusetts to install Synexis, and the only nail salon and day spa in Massachusetts to use it.

Matt is quite enthusiastic about the devices, and sees them as the future in battling against COVID-19. He says you can’t even smell a perm in the salon anymore.

The system has been tried and tested by organizations such as the LA Dodgers and the Tampa Bay Rays, to help players with asthma and prevent the spread of sickness between players within the locker room and the clubhouse.

According to State law the spa section of Jesamondo cannot be opened until Phase 2, Part 2 of the business reopening plan, which is scheduled to start Monday, June 22. Traiger is ready for that phase to begin. In fact, he’s confident that the spa could open today and be perfectly safe for both workers and customers due to the new safety system. The State provided funding to many small businesses to help them during the pandemic. Jesamondo used the funding to invest in the technology.

As of now Jesamondo is open for hair services through appointment, and Traiger is confident that it is a safe environment for workers and customers. With June 22 coming up fast, he says the staff is ready to welcome back customers for mani/pedis, waxing, facials, massage, reiki, and more.


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Filed Under: Business

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Pandemic claims Natick’s Common Cafe & Kitchen

June 17, 2020 by Bob Brown 2 Comments

Even as some Natick and area restaurants celebrate newfound freedom to serve meals outdoors, the Common Cafe & Kitchen has announced it is closing.

“We tried hard but could not survive the epidemic,” the eatery’s owners posted on social media Wednesday night, expressing their sadness at delivering the news.

Natick, The Common Cafe & Kitchen

The eclectic restaurant, which has been a cafe during the morning and day, and a Persian kabab fest for lunch and dinner, resided at the former Bakery on the Common space at the corner of South Main Street and Pond Street across from Natick Common. The owners mixed things up, offering open mic nights and jazz, too.

We even crossed the border from Wellesley a few years back to review it, after hearing good things.


Where to eat in Natick

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Filed Under: Business, Restaurants

Natick Business Buzz: Natick.Business website launches; Five Crows reopening; Uni-T on the way

June 17, 2020 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

Our round-up of the latest Natick, Mass., business news:

Natick.Business website launches

A new website called Natick.Business has launched through a joint effort by Natick merchants through the Natick Center Cultural District and Natick Center Associates, and Natick’s Community & Economic Development Department.

The site, which is still being fleshed out, features information from Natick and the Commonwealth that’s helpful to businesses looking to reopen safely, and provides resources, such as access to free signage covered by the town. Volunteers in specific industry sectors will help businesses get up to speed on best practices for reopening, too.Natick.business

Five Crows reopening

Five Crows, the gallery and handcrafted gifts shop at 41 Main St., in Natick Center, will be back in action as of this Thursday, June 18. Just in time for this weekend’s Father’s Day.

You’ll need to wear a mask (spares available) and must use hand sanitizer upon entering. Gloves will be available, too. The store will be limited to 7 customers at a time, contact-free transactions will be offered, as will gift wrap. No cash transactions.

5 crows

Uni-T making move from mall to Natick Center

Uni-T, which describes itself as a combined art gallery, T-shirt and gift shop, has closed the Natick shop it started in 2012 and is planning to open soon on Court Street in Natick Center. Multitalented owner Eujin Kim Neilan features her own illustrated children’s books, hand-printed T-shirts and other creations, plus those of other local artists. Dance, music and book readings are among the sorts of events Uni-T has held in the past.

The business has humble roots, with Eujin starting in a home studio, branching out to farmers’ markets, and going from there. Sounds like a perfect fit for Natick’s artsy center.

Uni-T
Uni-T, coming soon to downtown Natick

Got Natick business news? natickreport@gmail.com

Filed Under: Business

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