Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | |
Founded | September 2011 |
Founders |
|
Headquarters | 30 W. North Ave., Baltimore, Maryland , United States |
Area served | Greater Baltimore |
Owners |
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Restaurant information | |
Head chef | Jake Cornman |
Food type | American |
Coordinates | 39°18′41″N76°37′4″W / 39.31139°N 76.61778°W |
Website | mobtownballroom |
Mobtown Ballroom & Café is a ballroom and restaurant in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It was founded in 2011 as a swing dance venue in the Pigtown neighborhood. In 2023, it moved to Station North and added a café.
The business was co-founded as Mobtown Ballroom by Sarah Sullivan and Michael Seguin, [1] along with Nina Gilkenson. [2] [3] It opened in September 2011. [4] It initially occupied a deconsecrated Episcopalian church at 861 Washington Blvd. in Pigtown built in the 1870s [4] with 2,800 square feet (260 m2) of space. [5] The business enlisted volunteers from the dance community to build a custom 5-layer sprung floor with more than 10,000 nails and screws. [6] [ unreliable source? ] [1]
In 2014, following a years-long process, it acquired a liquor license after Bill Ferguson sponsored favorable state legislation that allowed the license despite the presence of nearby churches, conditional on their consent, and councilmember Ed Reisinger helped them get the building rezoned. [4] [2]
Gilkenson left around 2016. [7] In 2019, the church space was sold to Stax Charm City LLC. [8] Mobtown came into conflict with the new landlord and in 2023 decided not to renew its lease. [1] It relocated to a 5,000-square-foot (460 m2) space [8] in North Avenue Market (a block-long market built in 1928 [9] ) in Station North with the assistance of the Central Baltimore Partnership and developer John Renner. [1] The owners added a cafe component because, they said, "food is the number one thing that people gather around". [10] It held a soft reopening in January 2024, [11] followed by a grand opening celebration in April 2024 [12] after volunteers built a new sprung floor. [10] [1]
Mobtown is run as a private for-profit business. [4]
Sullivan said she aspires for the ballroom to serve as a third place and community gathering point. [1] [9] [13] Patrons have noted the close-knit dance community that frequents the ballroom, often drawing allusions to its religious former home. [13] [14] [2]
The cafe is open in the morning and afternoon Monday-Saturday. [15] On Fridays, it becomes the "Jobtown Ballroom" coworking space, with patrons invited to add break time activities to a paper agenda. [10]
Mobtown hosts swing dances every Monday and Friday night, preceded by lessons. [5] [10] Live bands play regularly, [16] [14] and alcoholic drinks are sold. [17] There is no set end time, but some dances extend past 2 a.m. [18]
Mobtown also leases their space for belly dancing [19] and circus arts classes and square dances. [13] [17]
Mobtown serves American cuisine, with a changing menu to adapt to in-season ingredients. [10] Its head chef, Jake Cornman, described its menu as "Simple classics done right and from scratch". [9] The restaurant serves coffee from Black Acres Coffee Roastery. [9]
The Savoy Ballroom was a large ballroom for music and public dancing located at 596 Lenox Avenue, between 140th and 141st Streets in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. Lenox Avenue was the main thoroughfare through upper Harlem. Poet Langston Hughes calls it the "Heartbeat of Harlem" in Juke Box Love Song, and he set his work "Lenox Avenue: Midnight" on the legendary street. The Savoy was one of many Harlem hot spots along Lenox, but it was the one to be called the "World's Finest Ballroom". It was in operation from March 12, 1926, to July 10, 1958, and as Barbara Englebrecht writes in her article "Swinging at the Savoy", it was "a building, a geographic place, a ballroom, and the 'soul' of a neighborhood". It was opened and owned by white entrepreneur Jay Faggen and Jewish businessman Moe Gale. It was managed by African-American businessman and civic leader Charles Buchanan. Buchanan, who was born in the British West Indies, sought to run a "luxury ballroom to accommodate the many thousands who wished to dance in an atmosphere of tasteful refinement, rather than in the small stuffy halls and the foul smelling, smoke laden cellar nightclubs ..."
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