Midtown Kingstonโs main arterial, Broadway, is turning into quite the culinary corridor and nightlife strip. Anchored at one end by, well, The Anchor (which is under contract, with the buyerโs rumored intention to continue running it as is), the street now boasts hip deli/bar/eatery Lunch Nightly, Mediterranean restaurant Masa Midtown, PAKT, Tubbyโs, West Kill Brewingโs soon-coming satelite outpost, Tanma Ramen, and a second location for the hugely popular Ollieโs Pizza in High Falls is opening soon.
On March 23, the owners of Ollieโs purchased the building at 582 Broadway, which for years has housed Tonyโs PizzeriaโKingstonโs first-ever pizzeria, opened in 1937. โIt was a sort of combination of us being open to the next thing, feeling like we had momentum that we wanted to take advantage of, and also this really cool, historic space becoming available,โ says co-owner Sophie Peltzer-Rollo. โIt is in an amazing location surrounded by a lot of other great community businesses. It felt very serendipitous.โ
The building includes three retail spaces and a three-bedroom apartment upstairs. The Tonyโs space will be converted into a bistro-style restaurant helmed by chef Chris Bradley, who currently works at Ollieโs and whose culinary track record includes time at high-profile Manhattan eateries Gramercy Tavern and Cafe Boulud. The middle space will be turned into an Ollieโs Pizza slice shop, with the third space serving as a provisions shop and commissary kitchen for all the other businesses.
โWeโll sell prepared foods like charcuterie, rotisserie chicken, and fresh bread,โ says Peltzer-Rollo. โIn the commissary space, weโll probably do whole-animal butchering for all of the meat products for our restaurants, which will help us with sustainability and minimizing waste. Probably weโll have the dough for the pizzerias made there and potentially our cheese as well. The specifics are up in the air, but the idea is to create a really efficient model.โ
Depending on the resulting production schedule for the different products coming out of the commissary kitchen, Peltzer-Rollo said the team is interested in finding a way to open up the space for rental. โIt will really depend on availability, but it would be awesome to make that something that could be rented out or for community projects,โ she said.
Right now, the Tonyโs space has been stripped to the studs as the previous owner Dylan Kennedy cut out portions of the drywall to take the pizzeriaโs signature Todd Samara mural with him. โIโm really happy he was able to take it,โ Peltzer-Rollo says. โI know those murals were sentimental for a lot of people, so Iโm glad they’re being preserved.โ
Peltzer-Rollo estimates that renovations will take a minimum of six months, with the restaurants looking to open by late fall. โWe may have to stagger,โ she says. โThere is still a lot of supply chain back up. Kitchen equipment and refrigeration are already backordered four to six months out.โ
The space will be designed by Peltzer-Rolloโs husband and Ollieโs co-owner Innis Lawrence, a High Falls native with a background in high-end and antique lighting. โItโs still in the works,โ Peltzer-Rollo says, โbut it will be elegant and casual, same as Ollieโs. Refined but comfortable.โ
This article appears in March 2022.










