No buzz about it
Mathis Winkler
LIDO MARINA VILLAGE -- Creating some buzz for his new restaurant,
that’s what Randy Teffeteller is all about.
Pointing out such things as a 20-foot great white shark that hangs
over the bar, old black and white photos of Newport Beach that will adorn
the walls and a yellow English taxi that sits outside the building,
Teffeteller gladly gives visitors a tour of the Newport Fish Co., which
will open Monday.
But he also takes care to point out that his new seafood restaurant
will have nothing to do with its predecessor, the Buzz restaurant.
“We were brought in to close Buzz,” Teffeteller said Wednesday. “We
weren’t really part of that.”
While that may be the case, Teffeteller pleaded with planning
commissioners in November to keep Buzz open. He didn’t succeed, and
commissioners revoked the restaurant’s use permit, saying that Buzz
officials had changed the establishment’s layout without city permission.
Teffeteller appealed the revocation to City Council members, who on
June 12 decided to appoint a hearing officer. That person will conduct a
meeting on the issue and make recommendations to council members. A date
for the hearing hasn’t been set.
In the meantime, Teffeteller said city officials gave him some time to
open the new restaurant while he’s working on amendments to the use
permit that he’ll submit in the near future.
“As long as we’re top operators, we should be fine,” he said.
City Atty. Bob Burnham said city and Newport Fish Co.officials are
discussing an agreement that would allow the restaurant to operate for a
limited time under a use permit that’s already in place. Such an
agreement may be in place by Monday, but Burnham added that the
revocation hearing would still proceed as planned.
Planning Commissioner Mike Kranzley, who has led the fight to prevent
new alcohol licenses on Balboa Peninsula, where alcohol-related crimes
are higher than in any other part of the city, said he didn’t know much
about Teffeteller’s plans.
But as long as the new restaurant falls within the use permit’s
guidelines, “there is no problem,” Kranzley said, adding that he’d check
out the place soon.
“I love restaurants,” he said. “If it’s good fish, good food, it’s
great.”
The new restaurant’s design, which follows a tropical theme and
includes a waterfall cascading over faux stones behind the bar, does make
the place look more like a dining rather than nightclubbing
establishment.
A retail area, which includes a fresh seafood counter and a gift shop,
will also add to the theme-restaurant atmosphere.
The menu includes shrimp buckets and lobster cakes for appetizers and
entrees such as “Maui Kabob” and “Tequila BBQ New York steak,” most of
which stay below $20.
During the week, Teffeteller plans to stay open until about 11 p.m.,
extending hours to 2 a.m. on weekends. He’ll also serve lunch all week
and breakfast on weekends. A champagne brunch is planned for Sundays.
Nearby merchants said they were pleased with Teffeteller’s plans.
Britt -- “No last name, just like Cher or Madonna” -- who designs
fashion and accessories and has a store next to the restaurant, said she
welcomed the change.
“It will only create more business,” said Britt, who is married to
former City Council candidate Dennis Lahey. “I wish them the very best.
If [the restaurant] has a pulse, the rest of the village will have a
pulse.”
Edie Calvetti, who works at another fashion store in the village,
agreed.
“We’ve had a lot of bad experiences with the restaurant down there,”
she said, adding that The Warehouse restaurant, Buzz’s predecessor, had
drawn huge crowds that also stopped by other shops.
“I can’t wait for them to open,” Calvetti said. “This area needs walk
traffic. We pay a lot of rent, and you have to have a lot of merchandise
turnover or you’re gone.”
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