The Container Cafe Concept sample


A once-empty lot in the Seventh Ward has sprouted a pair of casual eateries built from recycled shipping containers, with one serving wings and loaded fries and the other specializing in salads and wraps.

Together, the development is called the Box Spot, and it opened last week on the 1700 block of North Claiborne Avenue, at the corner of Annette Street. A grand opening is planned for Wednesday (June 7), at 1 p.m. The Box Spot proprietors are already working on a second edition of the same shipping container cafe concept, this time in Mid-City.

?It?s different and we like it because it?s different," said Austin Duncan, who has developed the Box Spot with his family. "You don?t see anything like this around, and I think because it?s unique that will be part of the draw."
The Box Spot sits a few blocks from Elysian Fields and adjacent to areas that have lately been a hotbed for new and different food and drink concepts,Its a new Concept about Container Restaurant



This one comes from a family with long roots in the neighborhood. The Duncans are part of the family that runs Rhodes Funeral Home, which has a funeral parlor at the opposite end of the block. Austin's parents, Gina and Omar Duncan, also run J?s Seafood Dock, a walk-up eatery and oyster bar in the French Market.

The Box Spot's address was once home to Del's Lounge, though that neighborhood bar had been closed for years before a 2011 fire razed its building. With its prime colors, crisscrossed awnings and modern look, the shipping container cluster is an eye-catching new addition to this stretch of North Claiborne Avenue.

"You see a lot of new trends and ideas in New Orleans right now," said Omar Duncan. ""We started this to bring something a little different and innovative to this area."
Eating outside the box


At the Box Spot, each container encases its own take-out joint, with shared outdoor seating on the deck between them. Swing open the doors and you find wood plank floors, finished walls and wood-trimmed counters with granite tops. The containers are air conditioned and have windows and side doors cut in to bring in more light and give access to the deck.

There's room on the North Claiborne Avenue lot for the Box Spot to grow, and Austin Duncan is planning to expand here in the future with a third eatery for baked goods, ice cream and hand-made ice cream sandwiches.

Durable, uniform and ubiquitous, shipping containers have inspired recycling projects and building ideas across the globe, including many different types of restaurant concepts,yes its called Container Restaurant. In New Orleans, retrofitted shipping containers make up the offices and teaching facilities for Grow Dat Youth Farm, a youth development program in City Park
The Box Spot concept is modular, and the Duncans hope it can be replicated, too. Later this year, they plan to develop another Box Spot in Mid-City. This expansion is slated for a lot on the 100 block of North Broad Street, bringing the same design and second locations of the wings and salad shops.
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