Eatery goes from blowfish to Buddha
- Share via
Alicia Robinson
A change in concept and delay in opening haven’t dulled the luster on
a new restaurant-bar and lounge coming to Triangle Square.
Fugu Lounge was to open in February as the latest addition to
downtown Costa Mesa’s growing entertainment scene. While the shopping
center’s website still displays a Fugu logo and the name still marks
the restaurant’s third-level space on Triangle Square maps, the name
was changed to Sutra Lounge after a parting of ways of some of the
project’s investors, said Robert Stevens, vice president of Culinary
Management Group, which is building and managing the venue.
Fugu is the Japanese name for a kind of blowfish considered a
delicacy in Japan, Stevens said.
“Sutra is really more of a state of mind,” Stevens said.
“We liked the name [Fugu], and we liked the idea of it, but that’s
not really what we are.”
The Sutra Lounge will retain the opulent Mediterranean decor from
earlier plans, including wrought iron entrance gates, rich Moroccan
carpets, and shady alcoves with built-in padded benches and hanging
lamps. A 5-foot carved wooden Buddha on a pedestal will greet
visitors near the front entry.
Designers played up the lounge aspect with couches and other
nontraditional seating. After dinner, tables will be cleared to
create a dance floor, and the restaurant will offer a private room
for special events and a large patio.
Contractors have their work cut out for them to be ready for a
planned April opening. At the moment, much of the restaurant has
unfinished cement floors, exposed wiring and empty space that will
later be filled by booth seating and three bars.
The biggest change, aside from the name, is the menu, said Doug
McAllister, Culinary Management Group’s president.
“Originally, we were doing a sushi bar lounge concept, but we felt
like the sushi bar has been done in the area, so we changed it to a
Toppers-style Asian fusion cuisine,” he said.
Executive chef Stephan Beaucamp will apply his knowledge of French
culinary arts to what McAllister called “aphrodisiac-inspired
cuisine” that the restaurant will feature. Small plates will be
available for between $7 and $14, and entrees will cost from $14 to
$28.
Although stores such as GNC, Barnes & Noble and Virgin Megastore
have renewed their leases with Triangle Square, the shopping center
has been struggling to keep tenants for several years. The center is
in the midst of a campaign to boost occupancy from about 70% in
October to 100% by this summer.
But Sutra Lounge won’t have to rely on incidental traffic from the
shopping center’s stores, Stevens said.
“As a tenant, I think, [vacancy rate is] always a concern,”
Stevens said.
“I think this concept is really a destination concept, and I think
that [with] the location, the vacancy, we’re less concerned than we
would be with some other concepts.”
With the perennially popular Yard House restaurant also in
Triangle Square and the new nightclub Vegas nearby, the Sutra Lounge
will help draw people to Costa Mesa after dark, Mayor Gary Monahan
said.
“I think that a full-service restaurant, lounge [and] bar [with]
dancing is going to work very, very well,” he said. “It’ll
definitely, I believe, complement our downtown and be one more piece
of the puzzle to kind of identify Costa Mesa’s downtown as a
nightlife entertainment place.”
Newport-Mesa isn’t like Los Angeles with clubs everywhere, so
Sutra Lounge will add a lot to the area’s nightlife, McAllister said.
“I’m hoping that it’s conducive to people sitting, enjoying
themselves, having a good time, just kind of hanging out,” he said.
Stevens said between four and eight other restaurants similar to
Sutra Lounge are in the works for the West Coast, with the next
expected to open in Palm Springs.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.