Operators of a popular West End venue have big ideas for their planned hop to the East End to breathe new life into a closed park lands landmark. CityMag had a chat about the future – and tried to get a hint about its name.
After returning from a holiday in New York, Peter Rabbit owner James McIntyre had Central Park-coloured glasses on as he strolled through Adelaide’s Rymill Park/Murlawirrapurka.
On his holiday, he spent a day by the boathouse enjoying a coffee in the park and admiring the iconic row boats of the Big Apple. After he returned home, he was strolling through a CBD spot where that lakeside feel could be recreated.
“I walked past ours which had been shut for four years by that point and I just thought, ‘why is that not something of that kind of calibre?’” James says.
So he started pursuing it.
The kiosk was originally owned by Adelaide businessman Arnie Rossis who ran it from 1998 until 2013 when his daughter Ester and her husband took over. The Rossis’ closed the kiosk in 2018. Pop-up breakfast and lunch spots have used the space since, including Loch and Quay which moved in for the summer of 2018-19.
James first expressed his interest in the lease in 2017.
“It’s been obviously a big long road since then, been through three mayors, three different elected councils, the lake upgrade has been slowing things down just trying to wait until that’s finished ‘til we can get in… Covid obviously slowed it,” he says.
“It’s been a slow burn but as they say, good things take time.”
“We’ll bring back elements of that kind of era, but it will definitely have an overtone garden-esque Peter Rabbit vibe which is obviously our brand but is also just as well suited to the park.
“We want to just really settle in and not be like a dominating building, but just a lot of vertical greening, a lot of vines hanging down and those kinds of things.”
But, it won’t be Peter Rabbit 2.0 – the kiosk will have its own name and branding. James is keeping the name to himself for now until it’s been run by his team and locked in for good, but he did tell us this:
“It’ll be fun and playful, similar to Peter Rabbit. The name will be different, it might have a nod to Peter Rabbit, but generally will be a standalone standalone name or standalone business.
“We do want to definitely lean into how open and accessible Peter Rabbit is and just the general kind of ethos, quality food and all those kinds of things.”
CityMag guesses that Jemima Puddle-Duck would feel right at home in Rymill Park.
“We’ve had a lot of time to think about it over six years to get what we think will be a good business model for that area,” James says.
He says the kiosk will be a casual and no-pressure environment, with public toilets out the back that you don’t need to be a customer to use and the aim of live music on weekends.
“All those kinds of things would just help people push out a little bit and if you do stumble past, either walking to work or on a ride with the kids on a Sunday, it makes you want to stop because it’s just that energy around it,” James says.
The goal is to create an environment where people can come and enjoy the space even if they’re not spending heaps, and create a community atmosphere.
“The more people that are hanging around, the better,” James says.
“If they hire a $5 Bocce set or something and they’re playing right next to it and that’s all they do for four hours, that’s still going to make someone who’s riding past stop and think like, ‘oh, this is something happening’ that means that person might buy a coffee when they weren’t going to.
“It was a big factor in the model as well, just trying to show the council that you can have commercial operations in the park lands that people accept and are proud of.”
Adelaide City Council ran a community consultation on the lease agreement between November and December 2023. Of the 20 respondents, 95 per cent supported the plans, with only one respondent saying they were neutral, as they’d prefer cafes in the park lands to be temporary.
James says it will depend on how long it takes to pass parliament, but ideally, they’d love to start foundation works when the weather dries up, aiming to be on site by September/October 2024.
As per the latest Adelaide City Council capital works update, the lake should be practically completed by April. The lake base is completed, and they’ve started preparing turf to be placed around the perimeter. The last steps of the project include electrical and lighting works.
James says they’d love to open as early as Fringe 2025, to integrate with Gluttony, the foodie Fringe hub that takes over the park for month starting in February.
He says once the founder and co-owner of Gluttony, Daniel Michael, caught wind of who was leasing the kiosk, he reached out.
“[Daniel] is a lovely man so we’re just working through it together and I think the best case scenario is we just integrate as easily as possible… hopefully we’ll have a bit of fun coming up with some cool concepts that we can do in the lake.”