logo
This Michelin-starred Chicago restaurant is finally moving to a bigger space—here is how you can help

This Michelin-starred Chicago restaurant is finally moving to a bigger space—here is how you can help

Time Out21-04-2025

Lincoln Square's intimate restaurant Atelier has garnered great acclaim since its 2023. Owner Tim Lacey and James Beard Award-nominated chef Christian Hunter took over the space formerly occupied by chef Iliana Regan's Elizabeth and were soon after awarded a Michelin star—which they maintained in 2024—for their fantastic, fine-dining take on "folk cuisine" (i.e. traditional American fare livened up with global zest, moo shu duck with shallot aioli and pickled vegetables being a delicious example.) Hunter also received the Michelin Guide Young Chef Award, and Atelier was named one of Chicago Magazine 's Best New Restaurants last year.
Given all that success, it's not a surprise that the team has plans to expand the dining concept to an even bigger restaurant space when their lease ends in July—and they need your help to do so.
"As anyone who's been into the restaurant knows, we have a tiny space," reads the announcement on the Atelier website. "It's time to find something a little bigger. Just elsewhere in Lincoln Square. To that end we're working with SMBX to crowdsource investors." As reported by Eater Chicago, Lacey and company are looking for a space with capacity for 35 seats, plus a bar.
"Unlike typical crowdsourcing outlets, this allows you to earn your money back with interest," the Atelier team adds in the call-out, which will allow prospective investors to contribute as little as ten bucks. "Whether you invest $10 or $5,000, you'll earn 10.75% annual interest that gets paid out monthly."
They'll also be offering enticing perks to anyone who invests in the new space: $1,000 gets you dinner for two with reserve wine pairings; $5,000 earns you two VIP "season tickets" with reserve pairings (good for 5 visits each); $10,000 comes with dinner with pairings for 25 people; and so on.
The crowdfunding goal is to enable Atelier to "move to a larger space with increased visibility in order to accommodate more guests than our current 22 seat space allows for."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Asda announces major change to 180 cafes starting this month
Asda announces major change to 180 cafes starting this month

Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Asda announces major change to 180 cafes starting this month

The upgrades in Asda cafes will include digital ordering screens and table ordering service, alongside a new menu which will include pizza options and other items Asda has announced plans to refurbish 180 of its in-store cafes as part of a £180million investment. The upgrades will include digital ordering screens and table ordering service, which will be available alongside manned tills. A new menu will also be introduced with new dishes including smashed avocado on toast, katsu chicken curry, topped salad bowls, wraps and a new sharing range that includes nachos and loaded fries. ‌ Asda pizzas will also become part of the new menu with customers able to choose a full 12" pizza or individual slices, including margherita, pepperoni, American sizzler, spicy chicken, meat feast, ham and mushroom or veggie supreme. ‌ New drinks added to the menu include flavoured iced coffees, as well as a selection of cakes. Old favourites such as full English breakfast, fish and chips, lasagne, jacket potatoes, burger and chips will still be on the menu. The refurb, led by partner Compass Group will begin this month and is expected to be completed by the end of October. Asda has confirmed its popular Kids Eat for £1 deals will remain available. Some of the options for children include penne pasta with meatballs and a vegan hidden veg pasta meal, alongside fish fingers, chicken nuggets and the all-day breakfast. Ian McEvans, Vice President of Commercial Food at Asda, said: 'Cafes are an important part of the shopping experience for many of our customers, and this significant investment alongside allows us to bring a new look and feel, as well making improvements to the service and a refresh of the menu. 'We have continued to demonstrate our commitment to our cafes over the years with popular deals like the Winter Warmer and Kids Eat for £1 meal deals, and this investment marks another exciting milestone moment for us on our journey and underpins our continued commitment to ensuring Asda is set up for long term success at the heart of communities.' ‌ Andrew Jones, Managing Director, Compass Group added: 'It's great to continue our longstanding partnership with Asda, expanding to work across more stores and enhancing the offer with a significant rebrand and investment. The upgrade programme is set to introduce new technology, menu innovations and a new look and feel within the cafes. We look forward to getting started and our continued work together to serve the Asda customer.' It comes after Asda opened its first stand-alone George concept store in Leeds. The shop features George clothing, home and garden ranges from the supermarket and is located in the Crown Point Retail Park. Asda wants to replace all its existing Asda Living stores with this new format. Highlights include the George Spring/Summer 2025 collection, as well as children's ranges from Erica Davies and Billie Faiers, plus the latest At Home with Stacey Solomon Spring/Summer collection.

Wrexham boss Phil Parkinson's top 10 best signings
Wrexham boss Phil Parkinson's top 10 best signings

Leader Live

time5 hours ago

  • Leader Live

Wrexham boss Phil Parkinson's top 10 best signings

Parkinson has been a canny operator in what at times has been a hostile market but he's been considerably helped by the financial muscle provided by Hollywood heavyweights and Reds' co-owners Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds. It's unfair to say the club has an open cheque-book policy when it comes to enticing players to The Racecourse but Parkinson, now a veteran of more than 1,000 games in management, has regularly broke the club's transfer record fee during his four years in the Reds hotseat. His first few transfers when he first accepted McElhenney's approach to become boss were freebies with defender Shaun Brisley and midfielder Liam McAlinden heading to town. The arrivals of strikers Jay Rodriguez and record signing Sam Smith in the January window took Parkinson's transfer tally to 52. The majority of them have played some part in helping the Reds celebrate back-to-back-to-back promotions, taking them from the National League to one division away from the Premier League. Parkinson's policy has been to look at players who have played in higher divisions than his team has competed in so no wonder the summer rumour mill has been churning out such names as Jamie Vardy, Ben Davies, Tom Cairney and Christian Eriksen Even Cristiano Ronaldo's name was mentioned as he maybe ventures into the film industry while continuing his playing career. It sounds ludicrous but with what's happened at Wrexham, particularly in the last two years, nothing is impossible. But Parkinson is, and always has been, the man with the plan and he said: 'We have had talks with players but at this stage, it is about assessing the market and what is out there, and making sure clubs are aware of our interest in certain players, and agents know what positions we feel we need to look to strengthen. 'As the summer goes on, hopefully we get the best players to make us a competitive squad for next season. 'We have got our eye on a lot of situations out there. 'Hopefully we will make some good additions which can keep improving the squad like we have done each year in the past.' But just who have been Parkinson's top 10 signings? Although he found himself down the pecking order last season, Paul Mullin is unquestionably Parkinson's best Wrexham signing. Having fired Cambridge United to promotion from League Two to League One in the 2020-21 season, scouse striker Mullin's contract was up at The Abbey Stadium. And despite dropping down two divisions, Mullin jumped at the chance of living Wrexham's American dream. His 32-goal first season return wasn't enough to lift Wrexham out of their non-league nightmare but 47 goals from 52 starts the following season did the trick as the Reds returned to the Football League on the same April 22 day they celebrated promotion to the old second division back in 1978. Despite missing the start of the season after a horrific collision during the club's United States tour, Mullin hit 26 goals as Wrexham were runners-up to Stockport County in the 2023-24 campaign. Mullin also missed the start of last season after vital surgery to solve a back issue but he still added to his tally which included the Boxing Day goal of the season against Blackpool. That took his sensational stats to 110 goals in 172 appearances - and that's why he has to be number one! And another number one is goalkeeper Arthur Okonkwo. He arrived on-loan from Arsenal and signed permanently the following season after The Gunners released him. In total he has kept 36 clean sheets in 77 appearances and that's why he ranks alongside Reds' goalkeeping greats like Dave Gaskell, Dai Davies and Andy Marriott. Elliot Lee's consistency, creativity and ability to score crucial goals at crucial times puts him in the top three. Lee's next appearance will be his 150th for Wrexham since arriving from Luton Town in 2022. In that time, he's celebrated all three promotions, scoring 40 times and setting up many more. Ollie Palmer, who initially broke Joey Jones' long-standing club record transfer in January 2023, is next on the list. Like Mullin, the big striker wasn't in the first team picture at the end of the League One promotion campaign but he was one of the first names on the team sheet in the first three months of the season. The target man only scored three last season but it took his tally to 44 in 155 games. Ryan Barnett was king of the assists last season and his ability to whip in crosses from every conceivable angle put the former Solihull Moors wing-back at number five. Barnett will have to battle it out with new arrival Ryan Longham to get that right side role in the Championship. But if he can add goals to his assists list, he will be a regular in Parkinson's line-up. Defenders Eoghan O'Connell, Tom O'Connor and Ben Tozer joined while Wrexham were playing non-league football. Tozer proved to be an inspirational captain alongside Luke Young and his legendary long throw-ins helped take Wrexham into another stratosphere. O'Connor has been another consistent performer whether it be in midfield or on the left hand side of the back three. His goals in the FA Cup at Coventry City and at arch rivals Shrewsbury Town helped send travelling Reds fans into raptures. Both Tozer, who retired from football after finishing his career at Forest Green Rovers last season, and O'Connor are centurions in terms of appearance while O'Connell is only 11 games away from making it to three figures in a Wrexham shirt. The Irish defender was awesome in the promotion run-in where he also took on the captaincy role in the absence of influential skipper James McClean. McClean is hated at most clubs across the country but he's loved by the fans that matter and the former Republic of Ireland international will be an integral part of Wrexham's progress next season. That leaves one place in the top 10 and it's box-to-box midfielder Ollie Rathbone who just gets the nod ahead of the tough-tackling George Dobson and record signing Smith, who scored seven goals in 18 starts after moving to Wrexham from Reading. But it was Rathbone's workrate and eye for goal - he netted eight times last season - that made him a firm favourite with The Racecourse faithful and landed him the Player of the Year award. PHIL PARKINSON'S REDS SIGNINGS Goakeepers (10): Arthur Okonkwo; Luke McNicholas; Mark Howard; Lee Camp; Rory Watson; Liam Hall; Callum Burton; Kai Calderbank-Park; Ben Foster; Bradley Foster Defenders (14): Dan Scarr; Ben Tozer; Shaun Brisley; Harry Lennon; Jordan Tunnicliffe; Aaron Hayden; Thomas O'Connor; Eoghan O'Connell; Will Boyle; Lewis Brunt; Scott Butler Midfielders (11): Ollie Rathbone; Liam McAlinden; Charlie Trafford; Elliot Lee; George Evans; George Dobson; James Jones; Andy Cannon; David Jones; Josh Adam; Matty James Wide players (6): Callum McFadzean, Ryan Longman; Sebastian Revan; James McClean; Bryce Hosannah; Anthony Forde; Ryan Barnett, Jacob Mendy, Luke Bolton, Strikers (11): Sam Smith; Mo Faal; Ollie Palmer; Paul Mullin; Sam Dalby; Billy Waters; Jón Dadi Bödvarsson; Jack Marriott; Jay Rodríguez; Steven Fletcher, Jake Hyde.

Rangers, Hearts and Hibs watch Crystal Palace situation with interest as SFA has say on Euro exclusion
Rangers, Hearts and Hibs watch Crystal Palace situation with interest as SFA has say on Euro exclusion

Scotsman

time13 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Rangers, Hearts and Hibs watch Crystal Palace situation with interest as SFA has say on Euro exclusion

Uefa set to rule on multi-club ownership Sign up to our Football newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... The situation with Crystal Palace potentially being denied from competing in Europe next season will not have gone unnoticed by supporters of Rangers, Hearts and Hibs. Oliver Glasner's team clinched a Europa League spot after they stunned Manchester City to win the FA Cup at Wembley last month – the first major trophy in the club's history. However, there is a complication. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Crystal Palace's Marc Guehi (centre left) and Joel Ward (centre right) lift the FA Cup after the Emirates FA Cup final at Wembley Stadium, London. Picture date: Saturday May 17, 2025. | PA Palace are facing an anxious wait to discover their fate after being required to meet with Uefa's club financial control body (CFCB) to show they do not fall foul of its multi-club ownership rules. John Textor holds a 43 per cent stake in Palace through his company Eagle Football, while he is also the owner of French club Lyon, who qualified for the Europa League with a sixth-placed Ligue 1 finish. No individual is allowed to have a significant say in the running of two clubs competing in the same Uefa competition and the CFCB will make a ruling on the case this month. Irish club Drogheda United have already been expelled from the Conference League due to multi-club ownership rules. They are currently owned by the Trivela Group - an organisation which also has a majority share in Danish side Silkeborg IF, who have also qualified for the Conference League, meaning Drogheda are unable to compete due to Uefa regulations, although club officials plan to appeal the decision to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS). Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad While Palace are confident they can settle their case - either by proving that Textor's influence at Selhurst Park is limited or by the American agreeing to sell his stake - the outcome could have implications for the Scottish clubs who have opened their doors to investors from other clubs. Rangers were recently taken over by an American consortium involving 49ers Enterprises - who own Leeds United - while Brighton owner Tony Bloom, who is also a minority shareholder in Union Saint-Gilloise, is set to acquire a 29 per cent stake in Hearts, with non-voting rights, in return for a near £10million investment. Hibs have also linked up with Bill Foley's Black Knights Group - who run Bournemouth and have involvement with French club Lorient and Auckland FC in New Zealand. All three deals required SFA approval and the chief executive of the governing body, Ian Maxwell, has welcomed the influx of multi-club investors into the Scottish game. Brighton owner Tony Bloom is set to purchase a 29 per cent stake in Hearts. (Photo by) | Getty Images "Multi-club ownership is here. It's part of football," he stated. "When you look across Europe, the number of clubs that are involved in some multi-club structure is growing by the day. We need to be part of that or why would you limit that investment? It was actually interesting when you start to think through the process. We had dual interest regulations which meant that if you're involved in a club, you can't get involved in a Scottish club unless we say yes. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad "But someone like a Tony Bloom, for example, that's getting involved in Hearts, has a track record at Brighton, understands football, has Union Saint-Gilloise, knows other clubs. We actually make it harder for him to come into Scottish football than we do for someone who's just sold a company for £10 million that's got no understanding of the Scottish game. When you actually get into it, that probably doesn't make a lot of sense." Maxwell also attempted to allay fears that Scottish clubs could find themselves in the same boat as Palace if say, for example, both Rangers and Leeds qualified to compete in the same European competition with the chairman of the newly-promoted English Premier League side, Paraag Marathe, also now the vice-chairman at Ibrox. "Our board, we're looking at it from two perspectives," Maxwell added. "Does it grow and develop the game? Will it generate financial investment into Scottish football? Does it give us an integrity issue? "The integrity issue falls away because that would only happen if it was two Scottish teams playing under our jurisdiction, which it's not. The jurisdictional matter becomes a UEFA point and we've been clear in all the dual interests, all the multi-club investment models that we've done, that if there was, similar to a Crystal Palace scenario at the moment, where there's a question mark about which one's going to play in Europe, it can't be the Scottish club that's the unintended consequence or has to step aside from European competition. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Leeds United chairman Paraag Marathe is also the vice-chairman of Rangers following the recent takeover by 49ers Enterprises. | PA "Now, I don't really understand why Crystal Palace and [Lyon], but they've not been able to sort that out because UEFA have shown in the past that they can find a way. "There's both of the Red Bull teams so they've found a way to make it work, whether it's just a timing issue or whether it's not. The good thing is, because the vast majority of clubs that have came into Scotland have got other multi-club ownership models, they're used to that. "You speak to the guys involved in the Hearts deal and they're very aware of what UEFA need and what UEFA want and how that structure needs to look to make sure we don't get ourselves those problems. "So I think it's here, we can't ignore it. Why would you want to step away from it? Why would you want to block investment coming into the game if it's going to be good for our clubs? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store