You are reading

Rockrose Fills Its Jackson Ave Properties With New Café, Pizzeria, Japanese Restaurant

GMaps

GMaps

April 20, 2016 By Christian Murray

Rockrose Development has lured several new eateries into a number of old buildings it owns along Jackson Avenue, including Toby’s Estate Coffee.

Toby’s Estate, which currently has three Manhattan locations and one in Brooklyn, will move into 26-25 Jackson Ave., an old brick building that Rockrose decided to keep undeveloped that consists of about 850 square feet of interior space and a similar sized courtyard.

Amber Jacobsen, co-owner of Toby’s Estate, said the building is an “absolutely beautiful site and fits in perfectly with Toby’s unique neighborhood cafes.”

The company has cafes in Williamsburg, Flatiron, West Village and Midtown. This location will be its first in Queens.

Jacobsen said that the café will feature an extensive espresso menu, rotating single origin coffees, cold brew on tap and organic loose-leaf teas. It will also serve pastries, savories and ice cream.

Rockrose owns several buildings in this area, including 26-15, 26-09, 26-21, 26-25 and 26-11 Jackson Avenue.

“We own most of the block and we decided to save them all…to keep intact some of the flavor of Long Island City,” Patricia Dunphy, an executive with Rockrose, said at a community board meeting last year.

Rockrose announced last week that it has also inked a lease with the operators of Luzzo’s restaurant in the East Village.

The owners—Tony D’Aiuto, Eden Tesfamariam Gaim and Antonio Giaccio—have leased 26-21 Jackson Ave. and at a Community Board 2 meeting last year they said they planned to offer pizza cooked in a wood fired oven that reaches temperatures in excess of 1,000 degrees.

At the time, they said they planned to replicate the concept that they developed at Ovest Pizzoteca in west Chelsea, where they offer homemade pasta, authentic Panini and Italian wines.

Their restaurant will consist of about 950 square feet of interior space as well as a 650-square-foot outdoor space.

The developer also announced last week that a Japanese restaurant will be opening at 27-24 Jackson Ave., a 2,000-square-foot space located next to Dutch Kills bar.

The Real Deal was first to report on this story.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

5 Comments

Click for Comments 
Leslie Nilsson

How perfect that Luzzo’s is moving into our old Sage American Kitchen space. It’s my daughter’s favorite authentic pizza and a nice fit for a space that started out as a bar & grill for prostitutes, then a chocolate maker, then Pricilla’s Bakery, and for eight years, the original Sage American Kitchen. Good luck to the new owners!

Reply
astro

Looking forward to new businesses in the area! The Mill was too far to get good coffee from the court square area!

Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

NY Hall of Science debuts CityWorks, its largest exhibition in over a decade

The New York Hall of Science in Corona opened its largest interactive exhibition in more than a decade on Saturday, May 3. The exhibition explores the often invisible inner workings of the built urban environment.

CityWorks is housed in a 6,000 square foot gallery, and the exhibit was created by a team of NYCSI exhibit developers, researchers, and educators over the past five years. Visitors will have the opportunity to explore the intricate systems and engineering that enable cities to function, including how they break, evolve, and endure.

Twenty people indicted in Queens-based $4.6M vehicle theft ring after three-year probe: DA

Twenty individuals were indicted and variously charged in a wide-ranging scheme to steal cars in Queens, throughout New York City and its suburbs, following a three-year investigation by the Queens District Attorney’s Office, the NYPD, and the New York State Police dubbed “Operation Hellcat,” into the criminal enterprise based in Queens.

Some of the vehicles were stolen from owners’ driveways, some with the keys or key fobs inside. The stolen vehicles were often sold through advertisements on social media platforms such as Facebook and Instagram. The defendants are charged in nine separate indictments for a total of 373 counts, Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz announced on Thursday.