Fire damage closes Groundswell cafe in St. Paul
The cafe, sitting on the first floor of a building at Thomas and Hamilne avenues, caught fire late on Wednesday night, causing damage to the restaurant and the apartments above.
"Everyone is safe, and that is what matters most," the cafe wrote on Facebook after the fire.
The St. Paul Fire Department, which was dispatched to the scene just after 10 p.m. on Wednesday, was able to extinguish the fire and save a cat from one of the apartments, per the Pioneer Press.
Smoke damage has also forced the closure of neighboring shops We Are the Starborn and Liminal Lounge.
"The smoke damage forced us to close our doors until further notice, and as small, independent businesses, the amount [of] property damage and inability to be open to the public is both overwhelming and devastating to our livelihoods," We Are the Starborn wrote on Instagram.
Due to the fire, Groundswell, which opened in 2009, has temporarily closed its doors with no reopening date lined up. In response, a GoFundMe campaign has been launched to support the cafe and its employees.
"This fund will go towards securing a financial safety net for the staff to aid them during this troubling time," the fundraiser says.
The campaign aims to raise $25,000 and had collected more than $7,600 in donations from the community by Sunday.
Additionally, We Are the Starborn is having an online sale to support its recovery. It says in a social media post that 10% of all sales and donations will be given to Groundswell.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Eater
3 days ago
- Eater
A Fire Set by an Alleged Serial Arsonist Burned Cafe Olli's Firewood
It's been a tough stretch for Cafe Olli, the celebrated cafe and restaurant. The staff was already dealing with the stress and financial strain of having to repair equipment along with a general slowdown in business (something many Portland restaurants are struggling with). Then, earlier this week, someone set Olli's woodshed on fire right after a load of new firewood was delivered, resulting in a loss of $2,000, according to the business. 'Financial impact aside this has been a real blow to us, it's one more instance in a long line of tough circumstances we've been dealing with here,' wrote Olli's owners on Instagram. 'We do want to recognize that there are a lot of horrible things happening in the world and we are very fortunate that this wasn't worse but it has been really hard over here and this one feels different, it feels personal and has left us feeling totally defeated.' On Wednesday, July 30, police arrested a suspect in connection with the fire, a man who is accused of starting a string of fires in Northeast Portland, including a half-dozen fires set after he was initially arrested, then released. The fire at Olli was put out quickly, says general manager Cassandra Petersen, but the chemicals used by firefighters to extinguish it made all the wood unusable. Olli has bounced back, however. The cafe had enough wood in reserve to open for lunch and dinner following the fire, and diners showed up to support the business. Co-owner Siobhan Speirits started a GoFundMe campaign to help offset the cost of the fire and other difficulties Olli has had, and in just three days has raised nearly all of its $7,000 goal. 'We're just grateful that we had a bunch of friends and the community come together and donate and show up for service,' says Petersen. RingSide reopens next week In happier fire-related news, nearly four months after being forced to close due to a kitchen fire, storied steakhouse RingSide will officially reopen on Monday, August 4. It shouldn't be any worse for wear. 'The team has worked carefully and intentionally to preserve everything guests know and love about the RingSide. Guests will find the experience largely unchanged, just as warm, familiar, and timeless as ever,' a RingSide spokesperson said in an email. '[The owners] made it a priority to maintain the spirit, look, and experience that generations of Portlanders have come to treasure.' Rage room opens inside brewery You ever get so angry you want to break something? Either work it out with your therapist or else actually break something at Portland's newest 'rage room' inside StormBreaker Brewing in St. Johns. This is a place where guests can break glass, ceramics, electronics (a la Office Space), or stuff they bring themselves. Tickets start at $35 and can be purchased here; the brewpub also offers axe throwing. Vancouver's Elbow Room has relaunched Big news for Vancouver's bar scene: Veteran bartender Toby Maloney — the guy behind famed, now-closed Chicago bar Violet Hour — has taken over the Elbow Room, the bar connected to long-running restaurant Paul's. As the Portland Monthly reports, the businesses opened in 1970, and over the years the Elbow Room acquired an unenviable reputation. 'Its main draws were its early hours and cheap booze,' the Monthly writes. But after the old owners sold both bar and restaurant to married couple Paul Rosenbluh and Monique King last year, the new owners brought aboard Maloney to spruce the bar up while retaining its unpretentious character. 'Maloney will stick around for a bit before jetting off to his next bar project,' the Monthly reports, 'but don't worry if you miss him this go-around — he'll be here regularly to check in and change up recipes.' Eater Portland All your essential food and restaurant intel delivered to you Email (required) Sign Up By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Yahoo
26-07-2025
- Yahoo
Fans Turn to Crowdfunding as Manchester United Eye Alexander Isak
Desperate Times at Old Trafford as Fans Launch Isak GoFundMe Drive Unusual Measures in a Modern Football Landscape There are signs of desperation and defiance from Manchester United's fanbase this summer. With the club entangled in financial turbulence and glaring gaps in attack, supporters have taken the remarkable step of launching a GoFundMe campaign titled 'Sign Isak for Manchester United' to raise £150million in a bid to lure Swedish striker Alexander Isak from Newcastle United. This extraordinary crowdfunding initiative, highlighted by Isak to Manchester United GoFundMe Page, came after reports that Isak is open to a move away, having missed Newcastle's pre-season fixtures at Celtic and on their Asian tour. 'United need a striker. We need hope. So, let's do what the Glazers won't… and raise £150 million to bring Alexander Isak to Old Trafford,' said Isaac MUFC, the fan behind the page. Isak's Future Up in the Air Newcastle reportedly value the striker at £150million, and interest in the 24-year-old is intensifying. Isak has also been linked with Liverpool and Saudi Pro League giants Al-Hilal. His style—blistering pace, fluid movement, and composure in front of goal—would undoubtedly enhance any top-six Premier League attack. Photo: IMAGO That alone makes the humour and heartbreak behind the GoFundMe effort so powerful. United, having spent over £100million already on Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo, still appear short in the final third. But instead of decisive boardroom action, it's the fans attempting to complete the hat-trick. Protest or Pipe Dream? While clearly tongue-in-cheek, there's a pointed message in the initiative. '50% of Proceeds will go to Unicef UK because if we can't bring Isak to Manchester, we can still bring some good to the world. The other 50% will go towards paying back some of my student debt because United aren't the only ones in a financial crisis,' reads the campaign. This isn't about genuinely bankrolling a blockbuster transfer, but rather exposing the powerlessness many supporters feel. After Sir Jim Ratcliffe openly discussed United's financial woes and amid a raft of staff layoffs, the GoFundMe doubles as satire and sorrow. Modern Football, Unreal Demands What this bizarre but creative campaign underscores is the financial chasm between fans and the elite decision-makers. United's supporters have often been vocal against ownership, and this attempt to 'do what the Glazers won't' is emblematic of a wider frustration. Isak may never pull on the red shirt of Manchester United, but his name will now be forever linked to a movement that managed to say more about the state of a football club than any official statement ever could. Our View – EPL Index There's no doubt this GoFundMe campaign is equal parts satire and despair, but it also paints a stark picture of the disconnect between fans and club leadership. That Manchester United, one of the richest clubs in the world, could find itself the subject of a transfer whip-round feels almost too bizarre to believe. Supporters clearly crave a player like Isak. He's modern, mobile and clinical. But no amount of crowdfunding will bridge the chasm created by years of financial missteps and poor recruitment. Even if every United fan in the world donated £10, they'd still fall far short of the quoted £150million. This is a joke with teeth. It's a protest against a model where clubs are sold dreams but delivered bureaucracy and cuts. Fans are tired, and this campaign makes a bigger statement than chants or banners ever could. But let's be clear: Isak is heading elsewhere unless United act like United again.


New York Post
22-07-2025
- New York Post
Beloved NYC watch repair-shop owner defies eviction, gentrification — by working from his car: ‘I don't want to stop working'
Takes a licking — keeps on ticking. For 42 years, David's Shoe & Watch Repair shop was a staple at the corner of Hudson and Barrow in NYC's West Village — repairing timepieces and mending soles for generations of loyal, local customers. Through it all, proprietor Raphael 'David' Davidson endured. Gentrification, COVID-19, brutal rent hikes — even a move down the block last year into the dry cleaners couldn't stop the faithful watch man from tending to the ever-evolving neighborhood's needs. Or, so it seemed. It was 1982 when the Russian-speaking immigrant from Uzbekistan first hung out a shingle at 460 Hudson St. — nearly 40 good years before serious trouble for the family-run spot reared its head in the form of the 2020 pandemic. 20 20 'For six months I was closed, and I applied for a loan, but I couldn't get any loan because I work alone,' the 80-year-old told The Post. 'Me and my son, we work together for ourselves.' He explained that he applied for the same financial relief that many other businesses did at the time — but that his small size worked against him. With the $4,200 monthly rent still due and little money coming in, his bills ballooned to roughly $65,000. The government eventually sent him a paltry $1,500 — all going straight to the landlord. 20 20 That same landlord tried to evict him just as business was getting back to normal — even taking David to court over the amount of rent owed. A judge ordered payments of $5,000 until the lease ended, back in June 2024 — with no offer to extend. New Yorkers in the close-knit community were saddened and shocked to hear the historic shop was shutting down, and they set up a GoFundMe page and a petition that amassed nearly 300 signatures and over $16,000. And for a while, it looked like a victory, albeit a qualified one — with the Acme Cleaners just up the street at 508 Hudson willing to free up a small amount of space to keep neighborhood tradition alive. A great idea — but ultimately impractical, David said. 'All my tools, machinery, everything was in the shop. I couldn't take anything,' he said. 'I just took some of the tools for repair and watches there, but all the machinery that was there for thousands and thousands of dollars, I couldn't take it because I didn't have room.' 20 20 Then, there was the working environment — a no-go for the aging octogenarian. 'For six months I was working, but they use chemicals over there. I couldn't take it,' David confessed. But the dedicated area fixture wasn't about to give up — taking his business fully mobile earlier this year. Now, David can be found at the corner of Hudson and Christopher every Sunday — working from his car. 20 20 20 20 There, steps from where he operated all those years, the most loyal locals line up to drop off their afflicted accessories, which David takes to his home-based workshop, returning the items the following week. 'I lost most of my customers, but I have some that have known me for a long time, and they wait for Sunday for me,' he shared. 'They come because they know I do a good job and give good prices and provide good service,' David said. 'They've known me for many, many years, so I keep those customers long enough — and they keep me busy also.' David Cohn is just one of the many customers who have come to find the service invaluable — over a period of nearly two decades, he's stopped by for watch repair, shoe repairs, even valuations of his most treasured timepieces. 'He's very trustworthy,' Cohn, also 80, said. 'And his son was also just as gentle as him and just as helpful. 20 20 20 20 'It's a shame to lose an institution that's been around for as long as his,' he added. 'It's just a shame that the apparatus of the landlord is destroying the mom-and-pop-ness of the community.' On average, David gets about 10 customers over four hours every Sunday — but after a video of him recently went viral on Instagram, his phone started blowing up with messages from potential new customers. 'I think we're going to have some new customers,' he told The Post. 'I'll find out Sunday.' View this post on Instagram A post shared by Kate DePetro (@katedepetro) 20 20 Once the video started gaining traction, a new GoFundMe was set up — 'for whatever that next chapter becomes,' the fundraising page said. 'We want to make sure he and his wife have the support they need — because for 42 years, David showed up for New York,' organizer Kate DePetro wrote. As of Monday morning, July 21, the GoFundMe has received 2,000 donations and raised just shy of $50,000 toward a $60,000 goal. DePetro revealed that outcome to him on Sunday in a new Instagram post. 'No way,' the surprised senior said. 20 20 20 Even without that boost, David had planned on sticking with the new arrangement for 'as long as [he] can.' 'I don't want to stop working,' David told The Post. 'My Social Security is very little, so it's not enough if I don't work,' he shared. 'My wife and I retired, and all the kids, nobody's home. I don't make much money, but at least I keep this running and keep me busy. I can pay my home rent.'