About Me

My photo
I have more than 40 years in the news business and have successfully evolved into an electronic journalist. Comings & Goings and Southland Savvy track news about businesses in Chicago's Southland.

The Open Bottle Craft Beer Store Now Open in Tinley Park

Patrick and Julia Bisch have opened The Open Bottle, a craft beer store and taproom, at 7101 W. 183rd St. in Tinley Park.
By Bob Bong
Southland Savvy

Patrick Bisch is a self-confessed "beer nerd" to the point that he chucked his job in the IT field to open a craft beer store and tap room called The Open Bottle last month in Tinley Park. 

"I love to talk beer," Bisch said from the store at 7101 W. 183rd St.

 "We are fully submerged into the store," he said describing how he and his partner and wife, Julia Bisch, who left her job in the hotel industry, started planning for the store about a year ago.

"We wanted to do something we were passionate about," he said.

The couple's passion was ignited in 2010 when they were frequent customers of Hackney's downtown location.

"We went there a lot and I knew they had a great burger menu and a great beer menu," he said. "One day I discovered Bell's Two Hearted Ale. That started it all."

In late January, the couple opened The Open Bottle. Unlike many of the new tap rooms popping up in the south suburbs, they are a retail operation that has a tap room and not a craft brewer.

"We have eight taps to complement our store," he said. "That allows our customers to taste the beer and take a bottle home. It's enough to get people interested in beer."

Bisch said he offers daily tastings (one-ounce pours) to introduce people to some of the unique beers he carries.

He said the tap beers rotate frequently, though they try to focus on local brewers. "We just ran out of Pollyanna from Lemont," he said.  "We kick a beer every day."

The Open Bottle carries more than 300 kinds of beer, Bisch said, adding that more is coming.

"We have more shelf space that needs to be filled," he said. The shelves are divided into Eastern, Central and Western United States.

The store has four tables and seats eight at the bar. It offers a variety of small bites and encourages people to bring in their own food.

"We love to see people bring in their own," he said. "We just had an elderly couple that came in with Subway sandwiches to have with their beer. We love to see that."

The Open Bottle also has an arrangement with Rich's Pizza Place across the street to deliver food to the store.

Kids are always welcome with parents. "We have a number of craft sodas for the kids."

The couple are well acquainted with the area. Bisch grew up in Mokena and his wife grew up in Palos Heights.

They chose 183rd Street because of its traffic, and proximity to Interstate 80 and the Tinley Convention Center.

"We had a lot of customers who came in after the recent Tinley Golf Expo at the convention center," he said.

If all goes well, Bisch said expansion was a definite possibility.

"We have plans for more locations," he said. "In different areas."

Regular store hours are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday to Saturday and from noon to 6 p.m. Sunday. The store is closed Mondays.

For information, call 708-263-0449 or visit them on Facebook at The Open Bottle or check their website at www.theopenbottle.com.

New Gas N Wash opens

A new Gas N Wash has opened at 174 W. Court St. in Kankakee, according to the company's website.

Like the store's first on 191st Street in Mokena, the Kankakee Gas N Wash features a convenience store called The Market, which contains a drive-through Dunkin' Donuts and a liquor department called the Beer Cave. The site also has nine fuel pumps at its gas station, with three diesel pumps for trucks. There also is a drive-through $3 car wash, which is still being completed.

The facility is open 24 hours a day and has a staff of about 40 full-time and part-time workers.

The three-acre site is owned by Len McEnery, of Mokena, along with Leon Baine and Tracy Erickson. The partners also own a $3 Car Wash at U.S. 45 and 52 in Bourbonnais.

S&S Clocks closes

S&S Clocks and Gifts closed its doors at 20881 S. LaGrange Road in the Frankfort Town Center Mall in Frankfort for the last time last monthafter more than 35 years. Its owners retired.

New Fuller's Car Wash opens

Fuller's Car Wash opened last month at 1725 E. Lincoln Highway in New Lenox, next door to Lincoln-Way Central High School.

The car wash had been planned for the corner lot for several years.

The wash offers full-service car washes and detailing from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday to Saturday and from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday, and exterior washes from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily.

For information, call 815-320-3880.

Some local Radio Shacks safe -- for now

Radio Shack has already closed its store at 16036 S. Harlem Ave. in Tinley Park.
By Bob Bong
Southland Savvy

Electronics retailer Radio Shack filed for bankruptcy earlier this month and announced that it would close hundreds of stores across the country after holding liquidation sales, including several in the south suburbs.

It turns out at least three of the chain's local stores are not closing.

Employees at the Frankfort, Palos Heights and Lansing Radio Shack stores said it was business as usual at their locations, at least for the time being.

A worker at the Lansing store at 16915 S. Torrence Ave. said his store had been holding a clearance sale in advance of it closing, but then those sales ended and new merchandise started coming in to the store.

"As of now, we're staying open, but who knows what may happen," said the worker who asked to remain anonymous.

The Texas-based retailer filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization and said it planned to sell from 1,500 to 2,400 of its stores to its largest shareholder, investment firm Standard General. It plans to close the remainder of its 4,000 locations.

The company, which was founded more than 90 years ago, also plans to open Sprint stores-in-a-store in up to as many as 1,750 of the Radio Shack locations that stay open.

In addition to the stores now holding liquidation sales, the chain recently closed several locations in the south suburbs including its Tinley Park, Homewood, South Holland and Matteson stores. 

Stores slated for closing in the south suburbs include locations in Chicago's Beverly community, Burbank, Dolton, Chicago Heights, Bourbonnais, Joliet, Country Club Hills, Crestwood and Bolingbrook. Also closing is its store in Munster in northwest Indiana.

Also included in the closing is the Oak Lawn store at 4819 W. 95th St. That store reopened in August 2012 after it was seriously damaged in a massive fire in November 2010 that also knocked out Eva's Bridal and Miss Fantasia Boutique.

 “Stores that are closing are expected to sell remaining inventory,” the company said in a news release. Everything is available including shelving and office fixtures and furniture.

Employees at the closing stores said they were not given a timetable for the liquidation sale, which is being handled by Northbrook-based Hilco Merchant Resources along with Gordon Brothers Group and Tiger Capital Group.

Sleepy's opens in Oak Lawn

New York-based mattress retailer Sleepy's, which has been on a major expansion into the Chicago marketplace for more than a year, opened a new store in mid-December at 11010 S. Cicero Ave. in Oak Lawn, said Peter Hooper, a mattress professional at the store.

The company, which got its start in 1931 in Brooklyn, opened its first Chicago-area store in June 2013 in Evergreen Park.

For more information, call the store at 708-423-5320.

H&M opens in Southlake Mall

H&M opened its newest story last week at Southlake Mall in Merrillville in northwest Indiana.

Storm pays off for Art Van Furniture customers

Turns out that anybody who bought furniture at an Art Van Furniture store on Jan. 1,2,3 and 17 are big winners.

The Michigan-based retailer held a "Let it Snow" promotion that customers on those dates would be reimbursed for their purchases if more than three inches of snow fell in Chicago on Sunday, Feb. 1.

Mother Nature cooperated and dropped more than 19 inches of snow, which means about 2,000 people who shopped at stores in Bedford Park, Orland Park, Batavia, Chicago and Bolingbrook will be notified by Art Van Furniture that reimbursements will be coming. Art Van will reimburse the cost of the furniture or mattresses along with sales tax and delivery charges.

The tab will be more than $2 million, the company said in a news release.

"We threw out the ultimate pass to our guests, the chance to receive their purchases for free, and thousands of Art Van Furniture shoppers caught these incredible furniture and mattress savings," said Art Van Elslander, founder and chairman of Art Van Furniture. "It's a big win for fans of our stores who found a great reason to cheer, instead of jeer, Sunday's snowstorm."   

The company held similar promotions in Toledo and Fort Wayne and has to pay out even more as those cities also surpassed the three-inch threshold.

If you see a new business in town or wonder what happened to an old favorite, drop me a line at bobbong@hotmail.com.

You can also catch up on Comings & Goings in other parts of the Southland at  www.southlandsavvy.blogspot.com