Extol Summer 2020 | Page 22

EXPERIENCE Setting The Standard New Albany restaurant changes concept in light of COVID-19 BY LISA HORNUNG | PHOTOS BY JOSH KEOWN There are a lot of potential disasters for which restaurant owners can anticipate and prepare. A global pandemic was never one of them. Beau Kerley and Tim Smith have not come through this worldwide storm without a few scratches. That’s why they are changing the business concept for their restaurant, The Standard Plate & Pour, 207 E. Main St., in New Albany. While the veteran restaurateurs haven’t dealt with a massive shutdown like this before, they’ve managed to keep several restaurants running and the others are nearly back to their regular business. But The Standard is now switching to a facility that will only be open for private events, including rentals and special functions put on by the company. “We’re going to be closed except for private (rentals). We’re going to be doing wedding rehearsals and business meetings and just every private event we can do,” Kerley said. “We’re also going to be putting on our own private events like bourbon dinners or wine dinners. Against the Grain breweries are going to be doing a takeover of our patio, and we’re gonna have a band out there one night in August.” While most businesses have struggled through the pandemic, the restaurant industry has been hit especially hard, with an estimated $145 billion shortfall during the first four months of the COVID-19 shutdown in the United States, according to the National Restaurant Association. June showed the highest monthly sales volume since March but still remained about $18 billion down from the pre-coronavirus sales levels in January and February, the association said in mid-July. The Standard felt it, too. “There was a little period of time we saw a little bit of an uptick (in business) there,” Kerley said. “We opened, and at first it was really slow. Then, we saw a little uptick and thought, ‘OK, well then, we’re gonna go here and do something,’ but it just never really continued. The margins in restaurants are so small, it just doesn’t make sense.” The pair have worked together for about 11 years, starting at Bluegrass Brewing Company (Kerley is still a partner at BBC) and then went to Crescent Hill Craft House in Louisville, but decided they wanted to strike out on their own. So, a few years ago they started 812 Pizza Company in Georgetown. The two also own Dos Gringos and the Early Edition in Jeffersonville, and they opened The Standard 20 EXTOL : SUMMER 2020