Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Tag: business (Page 5 of 7)

A Mid-February Building Report.

Maybe the updates should appear more frequently, the longer the building renovation continues. I don’t want anyone to lose faith!

In the picture, our space is down the street, on the left – just beyond the Main Street Tavern – where a black canopy is visible. Just above the back of that parked black vehicle. The awning used to be there with letters claiming Francy Law Firm. It is gone for the duration of the facade remodel. We’ll be between Gowns and More and Star Jewelers.

At the risk of repeating progress reports, here is the latest as of the second week of February:

The floor tiles, beautiful and durable with the appearance of natural wood, are nearly complete through the main retail area. The building features a long, long hallway and the installation extends most the way to the back. Looking at it, I’m reminded of the real wooden plank floors at Paddy’s Irish Restaurant, my enterprise in Tulsa of a decade ago.

When Mr. S commented that he preferred plank-type tiles over the other choices presented, my heart skipped a beat. I didn’t want to be the first in favor of the more expensive tiles the contractor offered. I believe they will give an Old World feel that will compliment the century-old pressed tin ceiling tiles that remain from the original building interior. The interior already reminds me of the Palace News, my grandfather’s business in Parsons, Kansas.

The kitchen is well on its way to completion, with more personal thanks due the building’s owner. The health department requirements are fairly stringent. I’m afraid I assumed those rules were common knowledge, but the renovation required changes more extensive than might have been originally contemplated. Again, Mr. S came through, and the result will be a sparkling kitchen with new ceiling, walls, plumbing, and flooring.

What is left from the original break-room kitchen, you ask? Nothing, mostly. It will be so new and shiny that I might be tempted to eat a meal right on the floor. The required dish and hand sinks are delivered and waiting installation.

Equipment for the new kitchen is being collected, and food warmers, a tea urn, a machine for brewing delicious coffee, and soup-special kettles are in hand, ready to be installed.

Walls have been primed and painted. Front glass and door installed. The building façade is still on the to-do list and will likely be among the last projects, but the most visible to those of us driving by.

The completely remodeled restrooms are being wall-tiled behind the wide and newly installed doors. The areas are compliant with disability-access regulations and big enough that I might have confused them with reading rooms.

When is the Grand Re-opening?

I still am better with predicting book sequels and publication dates than construction project endings. My eyes are telling me that it may be very soon, perhaps in the vicinity of weeks. Mr John, the contractor, told me it could February. He said that some months ago, but he is a professional, and his work is proof he is no amateur.

If it runs beyond the end of the month, I won’t be surprised, knowing full-well there is no way I could oversee completion of the project in that length of time. I learned my lesson in predicting the packing of the store inventory in the previous location. Sometimes, it just takes longer than anticipated.

Still, given his abilities and experience, I would not be surprised if Mr John brought it in to the finish line in the fifteen days or so remaining. I better get busy on my end!

Hope to see you soon!

McHuston

Bookstore moving update.

I’ve been fielding calls from folks wondering about the bookstore. If you have questions after reading the article, check at the end for a phone number.

Here’s an update.

McHuston Booksellers is on hiatus, still awaiting completion of the new location at 122 S. Main Street in downtown Broken Arrow. The building sits on the west side of the street between Commercial and Broadway and currently has a storefront awning that says: Francy Law Firm.

The law offices have been removed along with the old wiring and what-not, replaced by new cabling, columns and beams, and light fixtures. The sheetrock starting going up right before Christmas Day.

As with all projects of a similar scope, the completion date is a little bit of a guessing game. In all likelihood, it will come sometime in February. The books and fixtures from the old location are currently in storage, ready to be brought back out when the time comes. Trade accounts are preserved, and will be ready as soon as the store is.

In the meantime, we’ve spent some time nosing around bookstores in Arkansas and Oklahoma, gathering ideas for the grand restart. We’re truly excited about being a part of the emerging Broken Arrow downtown project and hope our customers will be patient while we get things resituated. New customers will – I hope – be pleased at the new addition to the collection of businesses in the pioneer district of downtown Broken Arrow. Our new location will be in a building that was constructed before Oklahoma statehood, but will be as modern as wi-fi and the latest bestsellers.

Look for us soon, at 122 S. Main in Broken Arrow. More questions? Call McHuston: area code 918, then 361 and 7860. (Have to break those up because of computer robo-indexing. The old days were so much easier…)

Thanks for your patience. I hope the new setting will be as surprising for you as it is exciting for us!

McHuston

Making an Impression. Or not.

Get yourself caught up in a juicy scandal. It’s the best way to find yourself at the center of public attention. Some Hollywood press agent once quipped something to the effect that – The only bad publicity is NO publicity. Or, as Oscar Wilde put it, “The only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about.”

Unfortunately, if it’s a real scandal, becoming newsworthy is the last thing you want. You’d really rather crawl in a hole and disappear.

For independent booksellers, publicity is good – scandal is bad.

I was disappointed at the bank today, while making a little deposit. The teller counted the sum, printed the receipt, and glanced at the form I’d handed her.

“You sell books?” she asked.

“Yes,” I answered. I was somewhat taken aback by the question, and maybe didn’t answer loud enough. She asked again.

“You sell books?”

“Yes,” I replied again.

The pre-printed deposit slip she was reading had “McHuston Booksellers” and the store address right there in black and white. Under the name it says “Antique, Rare, & Otherwise.” I figured that would spell it out pretty well. Before opening for business, I chose the bank because it is down the street from the bookstore. On Main Street in Broken Arrow, OK. Not a big town. Not a lot of banks or bookstores.

McHuston Booksellers is wrapping up five years as a brick and mortar store at this location. Five years is not a long time, but then again… If you had a wanna-cry toothache, would you wait five years for a dentist appointment? Stay on a diet for five years? What about missing a house payment – would the mortgage company think five year’s of non-payment to be nothing more than a drop in the bucket? What if, in raising the kids, the terrible two’s lasted for five years? Five years can seem long enough for a lot of things.

Five years for a business is supposed to be the corner at which make-or-break is turned.

That’s why it was discouraging when my own bank doesn’t realize I’m in business, or what it is I do here. I suppose if I made big deposits instead of small ones, and made them a lot more often – there would be some sort of connection. Being located on the same short Main Street isn’t enough, obviously.

I’ve seen billboards for bookstores. Small newspaper ads. Not so much in the way of television or radio advertising. All that publicity costs dollars – the big ones. I’m still depositing little ones in that bank down the way.

A juicy scandal is still out of the question as to a means of raising a little publicity for the store, but the appeal is growing.

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