New venue in town
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Barbara Diamond
City planners unanimously approved live music, a parking plan and the
sale of alcoholic beverages at the upscale restaurant that is
replacing Tortilla Flats, a decision that raised questions among both
opponents and restaurant officials.
“Is this a restaurant with a bar or a bar with a restaurant,”
asked neighbor John Ferrante.
The Planning Commission approved live music at Mozambique
Restaurant on Friday, Saturday and Sundays only, and limited hours of
operation to 10 p.m. on weekdays and 11:30 p.m. on weekends.
“We will be hard pressed to find five-piece bands that have to
stop at 11:30,” said Mozambique operating manager Tony Shill. “They
can get longer gigs. I would be happy to limit the hours on Sunday,
but I want to go later on Friday and Saturday.”
Neighborhood opposition was based on traffic noise and congestion,
even more than the noise from the live entertainment, which will be
controlled by a sound engineer in a specially equipped booth.
“We have a sincere desire to work with the city and the
neighbors,” Shill said. “I hope at the six-month review we will have
earned the trust of the neighbors.”
The six-month review was a condition of the commission’s approval
and will include a review of parking.
As approved, the restaurant will be able to seat 140 customers, 74
inside, 42 on the patios and decks and 24 in two bars. The entree
menu features items such as Alaskan King Crab, chicken, steaks and
chops.
Peri-Peri, a spice derived from the Bird’s Eye Pepper found in
what was known as Mozambique, will flavor the restaurants’ two
signature dishes.
Zambique Properties, which owns the restaurant, wanted to operate
from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. for lunches; 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on holiday
and weekend brunches; and 5 to 10 p.m. for dinners and lounge. The
group also hoped to have outdoor patio hours for bar and appetizer
service from noon to midnight, Sunday through Thursday, and noon to 1
a.m. on Friday and Saturday, with live or recorded music five nights
a week.
“I have a real problem with this proposal,” Planning Commissioner
Bob Chapman said. “It is a great location for a restaurant. It is not
a great location for live music.”
Chapman said if the restaurant is open for lunch and dinner, then
employees will be out of there not long after 10 p.m., which would be
less impact on the neighboring homes and residential parking.
“If you have music to 1 a.m., it’s a night spot,” Chapman said.
One of the conditions of the amended conditional use permit for the
restaurant lists 63 valet-attended parking spaces, with 10 of those
spaces designated for employees. The idea is to keep employees from
parking on residential neighborhood streets, a major concern of
residents that has led in other neighborhoods to the formation of
associations in the forefront of the opposition to businesses with
too little parking.
Mozambique owners would prefer to park employees off-site and are
pursuing an agreement with a business owner who has empty spaces at
night.
Although Mozambique has all the parking spaces required by the
code, neighbors feared that the change-over from restaurant patrons
to music and bar patrons would jeopardize their night-time quality of
life.
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