Indie Coffee
April 5, 2005 7:53 AM   Subscribe

The mission of delocator.net is to assist the public in finding and supporting independently owned cafés. There's a thinly-veiled stance against a certain coffee company, but the site's a great community-driven toolkit for finding yourself a good cup of joe anywhere in the US.
posted by mkultra (49 comments total)
 
"The standardization of this spatial, social, and physical experience is hostile to the historical culture of the café and is dangerous, ultimately, to democratic principles."

sheesh...it is ONLY a coffee shop.....
posted by HuronBob at 8:06 AM on April 5, 2005


I entered my zip and the only returns I got were the Starbucks up the street from me, and the Starbucks down the street from me.
posted by iconomy at 8:09 AM on April 5, 2005


looks like I've got some work to do--or my fellow 48105'ers can help, too. The delocator lists two cafes and ten starbucks. I can think of at least six other cafes within easy reach, so I guess I'll have to look up addys and post them. Best by far is Cafe Verde run by People's Food Coop on Fourth Ave.
posted by beelzbubba at 8:17 AM on April 5, 2005


Wow, it almost makes the Yellow Pages obsolete!
posted by uncleozzy at 8:22 AM on April 5, 2005


yep...at this point it is a great way to find your local Starbucks ..heh... oh, the irony!

Somebody should come up with some kind of directory for businesses, based on geography, distributed right to your house... and, to make it easy to find on the shelf, let's make the pages yellow......and, we'll update it each year

wait.. i have an idea....!

oh...
posted by HuronBob at 8:23 AM on April 5, 2005


damn you uncleozzy....
posted by HuronBob at 8:24 AM on April 5, 2005


The standardized experience is superior in many ways. Not only is the service going to be more consistent than if you visited many independent cafes, but you can find one of those standardized locations much easier than your favorite hole in the wall. And while your favorite hole in the wall is most definitely going to provide better services, these standardized locations also provide a different sort of service. Independent businesses can never be fully squashed by corporate efficiency--they don't account for human boredom.

In short, it's yet more penchant whining about Starbucks. Pass the Frap.
posted by angry modem at 8:25 AM on April 5, 2005


In less time than it took to post this, I just added a favorite cafe. You don't even need the full address.
posted by mediareport at 8:28 AM on April 5, 2005


No Starbucks yet... but one is coming.

I don't have a problem with Starbucks, although I doubt I'll spend much time at our new one (no free wireless). Being a college town there are already so many coffee shops (5 on campus alone, 2 in downtown) that I doubt one more will hurt local business.
posted by sbutler at 8:31 AM on April 5, 2005


Not just meant for coffee/cafes...

"The creation of other delocated database-driven web sites is encouraged. On the delocator.net web site, users are able to download the code necessary to establish a new database, prompting more sites and databases that may focus on other specific retail stores (fast-food, hardware, clothing, etc.).
www.delocator.net was launched with the intention of becoming a web-meme, sprouting many future de-located corporate stores"

posted by peacay at 8:33 AM on April 5, 2005


Based on my own unscientific observation, it seems Starbucks was actually the catalyst for a lot of the good local coffee shops you see today.

Does anyone else remember the time before Starbucks popularized espresso drinks, when all you could get for coffee in most towns was a mug of thin drip-filter swill at the local diner?

Nice post, good site.
posted by nyterrant at 8:40 AM on April 5, 2005


If I were a paranoid person, I would say that Starbucks could use this site to buy out more coffee shops.

But I'm not a paranoid person. Not at all.

SNAKES!
posted by hautenegro at 8:41 AM on April 5, 2005


I have now reached the point where everytime someone stamps their feet, insisting that I not support the oligarchs at Starbucks I fucking crave a Starbucks coffee and I can't stand Starbucks and when I go into a Starbucks I get hives. So now I've got a ventiwhateverthefuckinghell and a Chick Korea best of cd and hives.

Also do not use the internet to find coffee, go outside and ask someone where is coffee please? There is no coffee on the internet.

Wait, I just figured out why I might actually want to go to a Starbucks, because the good ass local hipster coffee place I go to has a fucking tattooed hipster doofus who won't say "what do you want?" or some variant, he says "What's up?" and so I want to say "Man that new Mars Volta cd is crazy, bro! Oh and I want a fucking small coffee you asshole."
posted by Divine_Wino at 8:42 AM on April 5, 2005


I'm going to add in all the Dunkin' Donuts around me...just to spit in the face of big corporate america.
posted by tpl1212 at 8:44 AM on April 5, 2005


I'm a lifelong tea-drinker & non-coffee-drinker who's spent almost half her life in second & thirdworld countries, thus the concept of ubiquitious Starbucks is lost on me.

I realize they're a large company which threatens to take business away from local concerns, but can someone enlighten me on why they are singled out? I've read more than a few stories about their businesses being vandalized, ridiculed, discouraged from bringing franchises to new towns, and so forth. Of so many corporations, how did they become Enemy #1?

Is it about Character: small intimate 'lifestyle' coffeehouses vs. a larger, rote, mass-marketed brand?

Again, I've spent precious few minutes in any coffeehouse so I'm not as familiar with how loyal people can be to an environment like that. Hah, I have witnessed religious pub-loyalty, though. Is there a 'Starbucks of alcohol' in the US?

There's plenty I could find on Google, I'm just curious what personal anecdotes MeFites can offer.
posted by jenleigh at 8:44 AM on April 5, 2005


I have now reached the point where everytime someone stamps their feet, insisting that I not support the oligarchs at Starbucks I fucking crave a Starbucks coffee and I can't stand Starbucks and when I go into a Starbucks I get hives. So now I've got a ventiwhateverthefuckinghell and a Chick Korea best of cd and hives.

Hah! That made my morning. Thanks, DW.
posted by 327.ca at 8:45 AM on April 5, 2005


I don't have a problem with Starbucks per se, but it does fall fairly far down my hierarchy of coffee snobbbery:

1) Local independent shops which I know are good
2) Local independent shops which I haven't patronized
3) Locally owned chains (Dunn Bros. and Caribou in my case)
4) Starbucks
5) Gas station coffee


The other week my barber informed me that a Starbucks was moving in just across the street from his shop, a block up from where I live. There's many independent shops in the same area and I don't think Starbucks is going to affect their business at all.
posted by nathan_teske at 8:46 AM on April 5, 2005


I'm a lifelong tea-drinker & non-coffee-drinker who's spent almost half her life in second & thirdworld countries, thus the concept of ubiquitious Starbucks is lost on me. I realize they're a large company which threatens to take business away from local concerns, but can someone enlighten me on why they are singled out?

My guess is because they're successful. And because many of us used to like Starbucks. It's a comfortable, low-key environment with good coffee, inoffensive music, free reading material, neighbourhood locations, etc. And then the inevitable realization set in that all that "atmosphere" was carefully contrived and bottom-line-driven. But really, it's just a company doing what companies do. The cynicism about Starbucks is probably a large part embarassment that we ever fell for all the trappings.
posted by 327.ca at 8:51 AM on April 5, 2005


DW- that was hilarious, man.

To those who gripe about the contents of the db for your zip- hey, it's community-driven. As mediareport said, it's trivial to add your own.

jenleigh- As nyterrant pointed out, Starbucks is largely responsible for bringing European-style coffee back into the American mainstream. For that, I commend them. However:

- I'm not a fan of their brewed American coffee, and many agree with me. It's roasted within an inch of its life, and is too bitter.

- Their coffee is overpriced, which has IMHO led to an unnecessary increase in coffee prices everywhere.

- They've increasingly relied on turning their espresso drinks into dessert, through all manner of caramel, whipped cream, chocolate, toffee, and whatever else comes to mind.

- They are incredibly agressive about their expansion, deliberately trying to crush local businesses in a market that (IMHO) is large enough to support them both just fine. It's not uncommon in NYC to see two Starbucks within eyeshot of each other.
posted by mkultra at 8:56 AM on April 5, 2005


Starbucks..... Never had an opinion on them till I visited London for the first time in 10 years - Fucking Hell, talk about saturation.

the problem I have with Starbucks is the culture, or lack thereof. I like cafes. Cafes have character, locals, and they all have their own individual peculiarities. They are like the 'alcohol free local'.

Starbucks is destroying that. Bit like Tescos destroying the local markets. But hey, it's all about choice.
posted by twistedonion at 8:58 AM on April 5, 2005


Seems to me that all of the complaints they have against Starbucks would also apply to Tim Horton's, and no sane person could possibly believe that Timmy's is a force for evil.

I gotta get me the Timmy's franchise rights for Texas...
posted by ROU_Xenophobe at 9:02 AM on April 5, 2005


My issue with Starbucks is that while their coffee tends to be good, everything else sucks. I can't even look at a Starbuck's smoothie being made without hurling.

It's not coffee snobbery that drives me to the locals, it's juice and pastry snobbery.

Another reason I hate Starbucks: I'm already in your store, shut up about the advertising already!
posted by KirkJobSluder at 9:07 AM on April 5, 2005


...no sane person could possibly believe that Timmy's is a force for evil...

Well fetch me a straight jacket then, 'cause I think Hortons are the crappiest mass produced donuts in NA. I really wish I liked them: there's three within short driving/long walking distance of my apartment.
posted by PinkStainlessTail at 9:13 AM on April 5, 2005


Oh dear lord, pop-up window site, the Jehovah's Witnesses of web design.

I'm not a fan of their brewed American coffee, and many agree with me. It's roasted within an inch of its life, and is too bitter.

Right, exactly. The espresso is ok, but the brewed coffee is like three seconds from lips to 30 minutes on the can, it's like freebasing rasins and exlax. They got bathrooms though; If a hobo ain't performing his abolutions in one of them or I didn't just wreck shop because I had a small coffee of the day you can usually wander in off the street for a pee.
posted by Divine_Wino at 9:14 AM on April 5, 2005


[...] no sane person could possibly believe that Timmy's is a force for evil.

Hmmm...not sure I'd agree with you. I'm fully prepared to accept that Tim Hortons is a force for evil. (Did you know that virtually every product they sell is chock fulla trans fats? A single Tim Hortons sour cream glazed doughnut contains five grams of trans fat. One of their whole wheat carrot muffin (mmmm -- nutricious, right?) has 408 calories and a whopping 20 grams of fat.

Now, Tim Hortons coffee? That's a force for good. I'm gonna go out and get some right now.
posted by 327.ca at 9:15 AM on April 5, 2005


Starbucks really has become an efficient caffeine delivery system. According to this chart, there’s 550mg of caffeine in one of their 16oz grande coffees, compared to only 190mg in a 64oz Big Gulp or 35mg in a shot of espresso.
posted by Staggering Jack at 9:18 AM on April 5, 2005


I dig Starbucks for their eclectic music collection. Nora Jones, Lucinda Williams, etc... C'mon people; you can't find that shit anywhere else.

Also, I'm gonna garotte the next shitheel who insists on hogging the cream & sugar table to get his coffee "just right". I need a goddamn stirrer. Move or I commence ta' scalding.
posted by KevinSkomsvold at 9:25 AM on April 5, 2005


mkultra -- They are incredibly agressive about their expansion, deliberately trying to crush local businesses in a market that (IMHO) is large enough to support them both just fine.

Want your independent coffeehouse to be a success? Pray for a Starbucks to open next door.
posted by NortonDC at 9:31 AM on April 5, 2005


I'll show those Starbucks people! The Walmart near me makes an awesome cup of coffee so I just went ahead and put them in the database.

STICK IT TO THE MAN!
posted by bondcliff at 9:32 AM on April 5, 2005


Kevin,
Exactly! At what point in the progression of culture did it become neccessary to spread out and re-enact the Manhattan project over your coffee? A hint of cinnamon, a dash of cane sugar, ooh too hot, more 2%, stir, stir, taste, fiddle. All I want is a little milk you bleedin' alchemist, move to the right and keep those elbows in.

I can see I care quite passionatly about all of this after all, I think I'd better switch to Sanka, Sanka made from lukewarm tap water and drank out of a old Campbells clam chowder can whilst I crouch on the rim of the toilet and grunt softly.
posted by Divine_Wino at 9:34 AM on April 5, 2005



posted by Shane at 9:46 AM on April 5, 2005


(Above art is "copyright" Kieron Dwyer. Or maybe not...)
posted by Shane at 9:49 AM on April 5, 2005


The Walmart near me makes an awesome cup of coffee

now that gives me a great idea: the demonopolizer. enter the name of a product sold at walmart and it gives you the names of locally-owned stores where you can buy the same thing.
posted by RockyChrysler at 9:52 AM on April 5, 2005


Prior generations of Americans wouldn't wait a minute to pay 35 cents for a bad cup of coffee.

Now Starbucks has trained a generation of Americans to wait patiently in line for a not-very-great $4 cup of coffee.

Independent cofee houses offering a better coffee at the same price for less waiting are the ones that thrive. The others die.

Starbucks is just another gateway drug.
posted by Jos Bleau at 10:01 AM on April 5, 2005


twistedonion: the problem I have with Starbucks is the culture, or lack thereof. I like cafes. Cafes have character, locals, and they all have their own individual peculiarities. They are like the 'alcohol free local'.

Keep in mind that outside the major US cities, things are very different. In northwest Chicago and other bleak suburban outposts, Starbucks - or, better yet, the Starbucks inside the Barnes & Noble bookstore - frequently serves as the intellectual/cultural hub of the community. There's nothing else there. I'm speaking from experience here.

I've found that in New York, where I live, in Boston, London and Vienna, where I used to live, and in college towns, there are plenty of good, local cafes - though sometimes I prefer Starbucks if I'm on the go.

Vienna had the best cafes by far.
posted by nyterrant at 10:22 AM on April 5, 2005


Earth to Delocator: Google has been invented. It made not be "community-driven", but it works better than this thing, which will soon be sued by Starbuck for trademark infringement, I would guess.

Results for my town from Google Local: 10 (includes one Starbucks but the rest are all indies. Keyword "coffee" plus the zip code. Additional results from nearby zips.

Results for same zip from Delocator: 2, and nothing from nearby zips.
posted by beagle at 10:27 AM on April 5, 2005


While I prefer independent or locally-owned cafes myself it has to be said that Starbucks itself isn't exactly evil. They seem to treat their employees rather well with group health insurance, help with college, cheap rates at gyms, pounds of free coffee and maybe other things. I can think of worse corporate entities.
posted by melt away at 10:37 AM on April 5, 2005


I wonder which alternative high school this Kieron Dwyer fellow attends.

GREED SUCKS!
posted by dhoyt at 11:01 AM on April 5, 2005


starbucks stores in downtown seattle. (I wish there were a way to make the map display more than just the top 10 results - like, all the Starbucks within that map square. That'd be crazy cool.)

I think we may have reached market saturation around here... hell, if I want Starbucks I don't even have to go outside. I'd patronize the local places, but really, it all comes down to laziness.
posted by salad spork at 11:11 AM on April 5, 2005


Meh. Coffee isn't even a reason to go out for me. I can make it at home and it's less bother.

They have me driving about 10 miles to the nearest non-Starbucks, but there are 5 Starbucks within a 3-mile radius.

I'm not sure what the point of the site is.
posted by Doohickie at 11:47 AM on April 5, 2005


Cafes differentiated from Starbucks can do great -- in fact, Starbucks can help them by whetting the appetite for something better.

Here are some things that can make a cafe better than Starbucks:

(1) better music

(2) better food (not hard)

(3) better seating -- real couches, for example.

(4) booze

(5) partial table service (order at the counter but a busboy brings you your drink)

(6) free or cheaper wireless or, even better, wired service via Ethernet, 1394, or USB cables. (I felt like I died and went to heaven when I stumbled into a cafe which had two 8x1 routers with 16 Ethernet cables you could just plug into and go.)

(7) did I mention booze?
posted by MattD at 12:03 PM on April 5, 2005


I'd like to see something like this for independent restaurants that deliver pizza =)
posted by joquarky at 12:29 PM on April 5, 2005


And then the inevitable realization set in that all that "atmosphere" was carefully contrived and bottom-line-driven.

Isn't almost any place carefully contrived? Your local indy coffee shop is probably trying hard to be the anti starbucks.

They are incredibly agressive about their expansion, deliberately trying to crush local businesses in a market that (IMHO) is large enough to support them both just fine.

I hear this all the time. Starbucks was a big reason coffee spread everywhere. I visited seattle years ago and went to my first starbucks. Had never heard of one before. Came back home and coffee shops slowly started opening up. If you're a good indy coffee shop, you'll be fine. If you're a lame one, and they do exist, you won't.

the Starbucks inside the Barnes & Noble bookstore - frequently serves as the intellectual/cultural hub of the community.

Not really a starbucks.
posted by justgary at 12:44 PM on April 5, 2005


I 2nd/3rd/Nth the "that made my day" to DW.

I understand the dislike of Starbucks from the standpoint of price (too high) and quality (mediocre) but am as confused as many of you about why people get so overwrought about it. It's successful because it fills its niche well - it's ubiquitous and easy to find and indentify and you know pretty much exactly what you're going to get when you go there. It's McCoffee.

I'd rather have a burger off my grill but if I can't and there's one nearby there's Five Guys. Or more likely there's a Fuddruckers. Or finally there's McDs and I can drive through, cram it in my maw and get on with other things.

Likewise if there's a better local cafe I'll get my coffee there, but if there's not, there's not. Activist yellow-pages apps are never going to replace the ease of drive-till-you-see-the-green-circle no matter how much they want it to.
posted by phearlez at 12:48 PM on April 5, 2005


112 Starbucks Stores found near zip code 10020
16 Cafes found near zip code 10020

(and I think they underestimated the number of Starbucks)
posted by bashos_frog at 1:04 PM on April 5, 2005


By the way, zip code 10020 is only 0.027 square miles.
posted by bashos_frog at 1:08 PM on April 5, 2005


Tim Horton's has a death grip on Toronto; there were six within a two minute walk of my old place in Toronto. Somewhere in Vancouver, I think on Robson St, there is a Starbucks diagonally opposite an intersection from... a Starbucks. For some reason this bothers me more than Second Cups almost diagonally opposite each other at Spadina & Bloor in Toronto.
I guess it's all a matter of how much globalized megacorp you want mixed in your coffee. I don't go to Starbucks much anymore just because I think the alternatives taste better most of the time, but they are nice enough places. Some people just need to calm down, and quit making popup-window all-graphics self-indulgent websites.

But no comment on this thread will be better than DW's.
posted by blacklite at 6:55 PM on April 5, 2005


MattD: Dunno if they have 'em in your area, but Port City Java has free wireless ethernet, free wired ethernet plumbed to every table, and plenty of power jacks -- or at least both of 'em in my town do.

Just FYI. Otherwise, it's a pretty unremarkable chain coffee shop.
posted by LordSludge at 3:53 AM on April 6, 2005


If only the site authors' awareness of alternatives to Starbucks extended to provide awareness of places other than the United States. Even Starbucks' own store locator happily accepts Canadian postal codes.
posted by mendel at 9:30 AM on April 7, 2005


« Older Mencken and Hatrack   |   Mass Expulsions Newer »


This thread has been archived and is closed to new comments