May 28th, 2005

Taking back the weekend

“It’s too early to say whether it’s a trend, but Victrola Coffee & Art in Seattle shuts down its free Wi-Fi on Saturday and Sunday.”

Victrola has been, since opening, my favorite Cap Hill coffee house, but I admit, I’ve stopped going. It’s been nigh impossible to get in and once you’re in, it’s just as difficult to get a table. The last time we were there, the husband pointed out that every table along the north wall had one single person with one laptop at it, from the window to the back of the store, all facing the same way like passengers on a bus. We’ve been going elsewhere, to the new Fuel on 19th, the not so new but suspected Republican Europa on Prospect, the Essential Bakery in Madison, or that tiny Fargonian, also on Madison. Oh, there’s a little place on Union and 20th, they’re awfully nice there. Hell, there’s even a Tully’s on 19th and Aloha. And, of course, there’s Verite, but it’s not really on our regular route and it’s a little too far to walk. Anyhow, there’s no shortage of alternatives.

The Euro-husband loves going for “kaffee und kuchen” - it’s fairly institutional behavior where he’s from. It’s interesting to think about Victrola, full of the technorati with their iBooks and Americanos and then to imagine someplace like the Zauner in Bad Ischl on a Sunday, full of hatted ladies in church clothes with a slice of fruit tart and a cup of tea. I’m not saying that one is better than the other. I’ve been meeting a collegue at Zoka in Wallingford for coffee and project management chats regularly. There’s been many a time when I’ve thought it would be nice to go to the coffee house in Aigen (my other home in Austria) with the laptop to get a latte and read my email. And even though I don’t need the calories, I fully embrace the kaffee und kuchen excursion.

It’s cool that Victrola is looking to strike a compromise between the dominant styles of coffee house cultures. I hope it works for them.

2 Responses to “Taking back the weekend”

  1. Gary says:

    Having moved off/away from the hill, I haven’t made it to Victrola in some time. I’m closer to Zoka now, though I’ve often avoided it for the same reason that you’ve found Victrola difficult. (And wanting coffee and a connection in that neighborhood, I discovered Café Marée.)

    If you care to get into a vehicle, you should visit Café Javasti in Maple Leaf—especially if you’d care to have a crêpe. (Also recommended: their cinnamon bars.) On the weekends, it can get a bit full late in the morning, but since they do not have wi-fi, they rarely get long-term campers.

    The deli two doors down in the San Marco Grocery usually has great things for taking home, despite the grocery having been sold within the last year to someone who’s made it more like a typical convenience store.

  2. david says:

    Seems like the right thing to do to me. If what’s important to you, as a coffee-store owner, is a coffee-house culture (and revenue) as opposed to an ersatz library, do what it takes.

    Although a Slashdot poster did come up with a less dramatic solution than simply turning off the wi-fi — why not just remove the power outlets? That’d stymie the long-term campers, at least.

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