The Foundry Project Statement of Interest & Qualifications

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The Foundry Project Statement of Interest & Qualifications September 9, 2015 Cambridge Eats c/o Sam Seidel: 43 Harris Street Cambridge, Massachusetts 02140 ph: 617-548-1267 e: seidel.sam@gmail.com

2 Cambridge Eats

1. Transmittal Letter Tom Evans Executive Director Cambridge Redevelopment Authority 255 Main Street, 4th Floor Cambridge, MA 02142 Dear Mr. Evans: Cambridge Eats is proud to submit this statement of interest and qualifications for a food-related development at the Foundry Building at 101 Rogers Street in Cambridge. Food is fundamental. It crosses generations, cultures and neighborhoods, brings people together and strengthens communities. Cambridge Eats is a group of professionals from multiple disciplines exploring how the many facets of food can provide transformational programming at the Foundry. We are influencers, not developers, who want to bring clarity and direction to the community portion of the Foundry project. Our overarching goal is to close the food loop for this neighborhood and for the full Cambridge community. We are excited to be a part of the discussion and we hope the Cambridge Redevelopment Authority will determine that this submittal meets the requirements laid out in the Request for Qualifications. The contact person for Cambridge Eats is Sam Seidel. Please reach out to him with any further questions, comments or clarifications and we look forward to talking with you about this exciting opportunity. Sincerely, Sam Seidel, on behalf of Cambridge Eats Contact info for Sam Seidel: ph: 617-548-1267 e: seidel.sam@gmail.com mail: 43 Harris Street, Cambridge, MA 02140 The Foundry Project 3

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2. Project Understanding and Approach Statement of Interest We are influencers, not developers. We want to bring clarity and direction to the community portion of the Foundry project. We are calling our project Cambridge Eats and our goal is to close the food loop. Food is at the center of all of these opportunities. Cambridge Eats is excited by this project and wishes to partner with a developer who shares our vision of what this building and community can be. Overall Concept The Foundry Building represents a tremendous opportunity to integrate the various communities in Cambridge that call the eastern part of the city home East Cambridge, Area 4 and Kendall Square. Because of the Foundry s unique role in eastern Cambridge as a place that bridges several neighborhoods, it is important that the ground floor of the building be active, open, inviting and alive. Many recent revitalization projects across the country have demonstrated that there is no better way to do this than with food. The Cambridge Eats team is multidisciplinary. We speak with knowledge and experience when talking about food, the business of food, property development, architecture, the economic and demographic needs of the City of Cambridge, and the Foundry Building itself. This expertise has the potential to bring together a creative and flexible design team with a diverse, viable and committed tenant mix. Providing a memorable setting to close the food loop a place to source, process, market, and distribute regionally grown produce to a rapidly developing community will allow this significant example of Cambridge s economic past to engage meaningfully in its future growth and community development. The Foundry Project 5

6 Cambridge Eats

2. Project Understanding and Approach Design Approach The Cambridge Eats development utilizes the the eastern bay wing of the first floor for a combined cafe market space that provides casual cafe space and retail space for local produce and food producers. The adjacent lawn, connected through the existing brick archways, becomes an outdoor extension of these activities. We see appealing examples in Washington, DC s Eastern Market, San Francisco s The Hall and Boston s own new Public Market. On the lower level, we imagine a combination of a community kitchen that will serve multiple purposes, including classroom space, meeting space, a certified kitchen available for local food creator, and support spaces for emergency food services for those who are food insecure. One advantage to our design approach is that the wings of the building can be stand-alone from the main core of the building, allowing secured access for other building tenants without infringing on the free flow of people to and from food areas. The Foundry Project 7

DN BENT STREET GROCERY M W MARKET OFFICE SPACE DEVELOPMENT HOUSING CAFE PARKING ROGERS STREET ENTRY PLAZA THIRD STREET BENT STREET OFFICE SHARED KITCHEN & TEACHING SPACE STORAGE M MECH W TRASH/ RECYCLE LOADING PARKING STORAGE CAFE KITCHEN ROGERS STREET 8 Cambridge Eats

2. Project Understanding and Approach The outdoor space has the potential to be an attractive and productive edible garden. This area will feature edible and ornamental growing space, a public pathway through the garden, and areas for seating and casual eating. Even in a relatively small area, large yields of nutrient dense and organic produce can be grown. Production will focus on high-value and easy-to-grow greens and herbs, which will be sold retail and used by restaurants in the Foundry Building. The garden will be designed to feel like an inviting and artful outdoor living room. Educational tours and workshops will highlight the sustainable growing techniques employed at the Foundry. The Foundry Project 9

Organizational Structure and Management Approach We know that this endeavor requires a real estate and/or food program manager. Cambridge Eats is committed to working with the developer to identify and develop the appropriate team to execute this concept. Our goal is to support independent food startups while simultaneously providing education and employment opportunities to neighborhood residents. The primary challenge in any startup food business is finding good people who can execute quality food. This problem is exacerbated in independently owned and operated food startups that have limited sales, limited hours and can only offer part-time employment at varying rates of pay. Similarly, food start-ups are hampered by the higher cost of delivery minimums and administrative billing and paperwork that is often done in the downtime of the owner operator. The anchor of this concept would be a community training kitchen, operated by a managing chef that handles central purchasing, training and perhaps 10 Cambridge Eats

2. Project Understanding and Approach production. The managing chef supports food entrepreneurs as they create food products to be sold onsite or at retail. Multiple Food Kiosks with varying degrees of permanence will provide a venue for brick and mortar incubator space. More established food businesses can lease for longer periods of time. Adding to the mix would be dedicated popup retail kiosks devoted to food entrepreneurs not ready for a permanent location but eager to sell goods. Strength through partnership In developing a list of possible partners for this work, Cambridge Eats held meetings with several Cambridge food non-profits, and engaged in conversations with organizations throughout Boston that could serve as models for what Cambridge Eats can accomplish. These groups have infomed are vision, and some of them can envision their group as part of the future Foundry development: Food for Free The Cambridge Weekend Backpack Program CitySprouts ChopChop Magazine Cuisine en Locale Haley House Future Chefs The Fresh Truck HomeHarvest Cambridge Eats could play a part in this neighborhood. We have reached out to Jesse Baerkahn of Graffito SP to better understand the food retail market, and we have begun conversations with Mike Ananis, executive director of The Rindge School of Technical Arts about ways that any activity at the Foundry Building could support the work that RTSA is doing in their culinary arts program. The Foundry Project 11

12 Cambridge Eats

3. Project Leadership and Team Cambridge Eats Leadership The following individuals formed Cambridge Eats to develop this proposal: Ben Barkan Founder, HomeHarvest - Edible Landscapes Tish Gardner Construction Consultant (WBE) JJ Gonson Cuisine en Locale (WBE) Kelsey Kent Manager, Barismo coffee Edith Murnane Consultant; former Director of Food Initiatives, City of Boston Julia Nugent Principal, HMFH Architects (WBE) Sasha Purpura Executive Director, Food for Free Sam Seidel Urban Planner, former Cambridge City Councilor In addition to our core group, we have consulted the following people to develope our ideas, to gauge their interest as a potential partner organizations, and to test the programmatic and financial viability of this proposal: Bing Broderick Executive Director, Haley House, Boston Toni Elka Executive Director, Future Chefs Jane Hirschi Executive Director, CitySprouts Alanna Mallon Founder, Cambridge Weekend Backpack Program Ron Sarni Founder, Stock Pot Malden Sally Sampson Executive Director, ChopChop Magazine Mark Stearns Director of Programs, Margaret Fuller Neighborhood House Josh Trautwein Fresh Truck, Boston Conversations initiated with: Jesse Baerkahn President, Graffito SP Michael Ananis Executive Director, Rindge School of Technical Arts The Foundry Project 13

Ben Barkan HomeHarvest LLC ben@homeharvest.biz Ben Barkan is the owner and founder of HomeHarvest LLC, an edible gardening company founded in 2008 (www.homeharvest.biz). HomeHarvest has several company trucks, seven full time employees, and over 200 gardens installed throughout Boston and its suburbs. Ben worked on over 30 organic farms all around the world and holds a degree in sustainable agriculture. Plans for business expansion include larger edible gardening projects, more integration with schools and curriculum, securing patentable agricultural inventions, and franchising to other states. Ben is excited to grow his team of skilled workers and designers and looks forward to being more engaged with the local food movement. 14 Cambridge Eats

4. Experience and Qualifications Tish Gardner Tishgardner1@gmail.com With more than 30 year in hospitality construction, Tish Gardner left Shawmut Design and Construction in July 2015 and has established a consulting practice, specializing in site analysis and selection, conceptual estimating, document reviews, and value engineering. During her career at Shawmut, Tish estimated over 500 restaurants from small sandwich shops to large National Chains. She is currently working with the Lupoli Companies on a 40,000 sf addition to a medical offices building and had put together a construction team and budget for the recently completed Sal s Pizza in Fenway for the same Ownership. Tish is working with Hadley Contractors on a 6000 sf restaurant in Milton, a high end private residence in the South End, and a playground build-out for a non-profit school in Cambridge. Tish has volunteered for a number of non-profits including Haley House s Dudley Dough, The Food Project (Kitchen Construction) and Future Chef s (Kitchen Construction). Tish has a vision that this building can bring people together through food while serving the community s less empowered populations. JJ Gonson JJ@enlocale.com JJ is a local restaurateur and caterer who has her finger on the pulse of the Cambridge food and restaurant scene. She is a local resident. The Foundry Project 15

Kelsey Kent Barismo Coffee kelseymariekent@gmail.com Kelsey Kent, a local resident, is the manager for a local artisanal coffee and light bake goods, Barismo Coffee which is also located in the project neighborhood. Prior to her current position she was the Manager of Dwell Time coffee shop also in Cambridge. She started her food career as a barista, moved up to assistant manager and moved onto Barismo as a manager more than 4 years ago. Barismo coffee currently has three locations (Cambridge, Somerville and Arlington) and are about to acquire a fourth location. The coffee is roasted in Somerville, and sourced directly with farmers from Central America, cutting out the middleman. This allows them to work with the farms and farm managers to guarantee fair wages and a sustainable coffee product. Kelsey brings her experience in building small food businesses to this project. She has her pulse on the needs and desires of the local residents who frequent their shop. Because she lives in the neighborhood she is looking forward to The Cambridge Eats space providing a local food hub, providing a lively place for gathering, celebrating, educating and purchasing food. Kelsey believes these spaces can provide small businesses with startup opportunities where they can be supported and thrive and opportunities for local residence to receive job training. Barismo Coffee pays fair wages to workers and they are interested in hiring future trainees. 16 Cambridge Eats

Kelsey attended Lesley University and in addition to her business interests has a strong interest in art management helping artist to become selfsustaining. Kelsey has a strong interest in this project and would like to continue to be involved in both the development of food related industries, employee training and the local artist networking components Edith Murnane edith.murnane@gmail.com From farm to farmers markets, from restaurant kitchens to food enterprises, from school food to city government, Edith Murnane has worked to develop food systems that support food businesses all along the food chain while creating food access for Massachusetts residents. Edith joined Boston Mayor Thomas Menino s administration in 2010 to establish the Office of Food Initiatives. Under her stewardship, the Restaurant Roadmap, the Food Truck Initiative, Boston s Micro Urban Farming Initiative, the City s Urban Agriculture Re-zoning work, and City s Food System Resiliency Initiative were launched. Edith was integral in launching the US Conference of Mayors Food Policy Task Force, which successfully lobbied Congress to affect policy changes in the US Farm Bill generating broad economic impact on cities and towns across the US ultimately fostering better public health. Edith joined the Mayor s office from Community Servings, a local not-for-profit food and nutrition program that provides services throughout Massachusetts to individuals and families living with critical and chronic illnesses. While at Community Servings, Edith built a farmers market, inaugurated the first Community Supported Fish (CSF) program in Boston, established a UNsupported demonstration garden, and oversaw the organization s school and senior meals programs. Edith has worked at a variety of restaurants and catering establishments, was the chef/ owner of The Cantata in Jamaica Plain, was a frequent vendor at a number of local farmers markets and sat on the Board of the now newly opened Boston Public Market. Most recently, Edith has been consulting on a number of statewide initiatives, including developing infrastructure for the grass-fed beef industry and developing a locally sourced, locally produced tomato-based product line that would create another revenue stream and market segment for local farmers. The Foundry Project 17

Julia Nugent julianugent@hmfh.com Julia Nugent is an architect and planner. She leads HMFH s Higher Education practice, addressing master planning challenges as well as developing solutions to improve student life and academic environments, drawing on her architectural experience to inform her planning acumen. In her independent work, Julia developed approaches to repurposing existing spaces for new uses at MIT, undertaking projects such as a master plan for the School of Architecture and Planning, conceptual design for consolidation of the campus library system, and a study to house the Music and Theater Arts programs within an historic campus building. Julia is a highly skilled team leader who sees both the forest and the trees when she is tackling a design problem, synthesizing a client s list of concerns, program ambitions, and space requirements into an inspiring and achievable plan. Julia brings all these skills to this team of volunteers working to develop and understand both the building and its potential programs and space requirements. Julia has long been involved with the Foundry building as part of HMFH s contracts with the City and it is overwhelming desire to see it through to the end and as a local resident and neighbor of the project to have a community impact far beyond the building s walls. Sasha Purpura Executive director - Food For Free sasha@foodforfree.org Sasha Purpura is the Executive Director of Food For Free, a Cambridgebased not-for-profit which addresses local hunger by rescuing healthy food that might otherwise go to waste and distributing it to those who need it. Prior to this, Sasha helped her husband found and grow a successful organic farm which sells locally at the Harvard Square Farmers Market. Additionally, Sasha is on the leadership team of Greater Boston Slow Money, a group working to connect local food entrepreneurs with the resources necessary for success, and a founding member of Sprout Lenders, a group formed to support a vibrant and healthy local food system by making loans to farmers, producers, and food system entrepreneurs that serve the greater Boston area. 18 Cambridge Eats

Sam Seidel Urban Strategies seidel.sam@gmail.com Sam Seidel works to create strong communities in great urban spaces by bringing people together around shared opportunities. He runs his own urban consulting firm in Cambridge, MA. A former city councilor in Cambridge, Sam is intimately aware of the history of the Foundry building and the broader ongoing dialog about the changes underway in East Cambridge, Area 4 and Kendall Square over the past decade. Sam is a board member at the Margaret Fuller Neighborhood House, a Cambridge-based non-profit serving the needs of the Area 4 neighborhood and in 2015, he received the Mack Davis Award for excellence in tutoring from Cambridge School Volunteers. Sam received his urban planning degree from Harvard s Graduate School of Design, where he was also a visiting fellow in 2012. The Foundry Project 19

Bing Broderick Haley House Bing became the Executive Director of Haley House in Boston in December 2013. He arrived at Haley House as a manager of the new Haley House Bakery Café in September 2005. Located in Dudley Square, Roxbury, the Café s mission is to provide a place where all are truly welcome and to create a workplace for men and women who face significant barriers to employment. Prior to his arrival at Haley House, he was the Director of Special Marketing at Rounder Records and the Manager of Giant Screen Films for WGBH Enterprises. Haley House is currently developing a new concept for training in Dudley Square which will open in September as a Pizza Parlor named Dudley Dough. Haley House does not currently have the bandwidth to expand at this time, but has graciously provided input on the training component which will be provided within this project. 20 Cambridge Eats

Josh Trautwein Executive Director - The Fresh Truck The Fresh Truck plays a critical role in Boston s healthcare ecosystem, ensuring Boston families have access to a reliable source of fresh nutritious food. With a group of new network partners they are uniquely positioned to make fresh food an integrated part of community health in Boston and will fundamentally change the way that families shop, cook and eat. Providing access to nutritious food has always been the focus at Fresh Truck, but it s only a part of their overall mission as an organization. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts has signed on as a community impact partner, providing funding and strategic support within the healthcare sector. Boston Medical Center HealthNet Plan has committed funding in addition to supporting community outreach and the pilot of their Vegetable Prescription Program. They are currently hard at work retrofitting bus two, which will host popup markets, cooking demos and other food-focused health activities. They currently make Fresh Stops in South Boston, Dorchester, Mattapan, Charlestown and East Boston, with more stops to be announced soon. Josh is interested in an open dialogue on how the Fresh Truck can provide fresh fruits and vegetables to the Cambridge local residence through a full time or part time location with the Eat Cambridge space, utilize volunteers at community spaces and perhaps joint venture with Food for Free or other similar programs. They are willing to consider a model that could potentially service all economic levels within the community. The Foundry Project 21

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5. Financial Approach We have analyzed the financials of this proposal and have established that it is a viable and sustainable program approach. Please see our attached proformas for more details. The Foundry Project 23