Wunderbar stays open for one more round
Crowdsourcing campaign delays last call for Old Strathcona live music venue
It was last callforWunderbar last week. TheOld Strathconavenue was about to be squeezed out ofthe Whyte Avenue live musicscene when it failed to make its rent, again.
"I had resigned myself to the idea that that was what was happening," co-owner Craig Martel told CBC's Edmonton AM on Tuesday.
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Selling enough drinks to pay the rent has always been a problem for the bar over its five years one it's never been able to figure out.
"Live music is a tough sell," Martel said. "I don't think any of the venues that do it are doing particularly well.
"You're facing a crowd that is often young. Some just come to see the show and won't spend any money at all otherwise."
Also, people don't go out to see live music seven nights a week, he said.
But that was justfine with Martell and his partners.
"It's just not the nature of it."
He told his customers he was at his wits end butwould figure something out, "which in my mind was trying to think of someone who has enough money to lend it to me."
But it was suggested the Wunderbar turn to its loyalcustomers for the money, those people who have been coming faithfully over the years.
'Not something I'm comfortable with'
"It's not something I felt particularly comfortable with," Martell said. "At the end of the day, we're a for-profit business and to reach out to our clientele for charity is something that didn't sit well with me."
That's despite the GoFundMe campaign that raised$14,000, something that still shocks Martell..
"I didn't think anyone would give. It's an interesting feeling, all these people are they care so much about the place.
"So many people have met all of their friends there and have grown so much inside of that building.
"They don't go there anymore necessarily, but they know it needs to exist for a new generation of people to keep coming through."
However,Martellhas been in the business long enough to realize that if you can't cover your costs with, well, thecover charge, it's the business plan that needs to change.
"To believe that after us being open for over five years now, that there's going to be a way where we magically come up with a way to become profitable when we never have been ...?
"Maybe someone else would be able to do that. I don't know if I have it in me."