Graham Kilmer

North Avenue Market Closes

Food hall turned restaurant at 59th and North closes its doors for good.

By - Sep 24th, 2024 05:19 pm
North Avenue Market, 5900 W. North Ave. Photo taken Sept. 11, 2023 by Sophie Bolich.

North Avenue Market, 5900 W. North Ave. Photo taken Sept. 11, 2023 by Sophie Bolich.

North Avenue Market closed Tuesday.

The market opened in 2022 as a food hall and co-working space with nine vendors, including bars run by Bittercube, a local bitters producer, a coffee shop and a bike-repair shop among its offerings. The business opened at 5900 W. North Avenue in a former Associated Bank branch building.

In May this year, the owner Chris Harris Morse pivoted the business, turning the market into an event space and a standalone restaurant, which he opened with Michael Pyle-Harris serving as the general manager and chef.

The short-lived Christopher’s Southern Kitchen opened in May this year. Bittercube stayed on through the transition to a restaurant, overseeing the cocktail menu and running Mosler’s Vault, a cocktail bar on the first floor. But on Tuesday, North Avenue Market announced its closure in a post on Facebook.

“Dear community and family, after trying numerous ways to enrich our community through a variety of shared experiences at North Avenue Market… we have made the extremely difficult decision to close our facility effective today,” the post said. “At the end of the day, our monthly expenses continue to far exceed our monthly revenue, leading to a model we are unable to sustain.”

Not long after opening the market made its first major change. Four months in, three vendors left and the market rolled Taste of JavaSam’s Deli and A&B Desserts into one “super vendor” called 4 Corners Cafe.

When Harris Morse and Pyle-Harris opened their restaurant, they each drew from their southern roots. Harris Morse is from North Carolina and Pyle-Harris is from Virginia. The restaurant served comfort food and classic southern dishes like fried pickles, deviled eggs, fried green tomatoes, collard greens, gumbo, catfish, salmon croquettes, barbeque pork chops and sweet potato pie.

As North Avenue Market evolved the mission always stayed the same: “It’s about trying to connect the community,” Harris Morse told Urban Milwaukee earlier this year.

The team at North Avenue Market hasn’t lost faith in the food hall model either, explaining in the parting message on Facebook that the idea could work long-term, but the business lacked the funding it needed to get there.

Sample Map

Existing members must be signed in to see the interactive map. Sign in.

If you think stories like this are important, become a member of Urban Milwaukee and help support real, independent journalism. Plus you get some cool added benefits.

Categories: Dining, Food & Drink

Comments

  1. Counselor of Peace Joel Paplham says:

    North Avenue has plenty ideal rental storefronts to start up a business. Unfortunately the area continues to be a struggle for small businesses. It has opportunities for start up businesses needing a reasonable rental price space. I personally think that’s so many businesses fail is trendy area rents chock out the success of a new business.

Leave a Reply

You must be an Urban Milwaukee member to leave a comment. Membership, which includes a host of perks, including an ad-free website, tickets to marquee events like Summerfest, the Wisconsin State Fair and the Florentine Opera, a better photo browser and access to members-only, behind-the-scenes tours, starts at $9/month. Learn more.

Join now and cancel anytime.

If you are an existing member, sign-in to leave a comment.

Have questions? Need to report an error? Contact Us