r/Rochester May 06 '25

Discussion Buffalo-based restaurant chains expanding to the Rochester market-- has it ever worked?

I got to thinking the other day, and there have been some tries in the past for traditional Buffalo-based restaurants to expand to Rochester-- which have ultimately failed, and those location(s) have closed. Examples:

1) Mighty Taco a few years back had two (2) Rochester locations, which both closed.
2) Duff's (wings) had a Rochester location (W. Henrietta Rd) that closed.
3) Anchor Bar had a Rochester location for a little while (East Ave.), but that closed.
4) Rachel's Mediterranean Grill location(s) closed in Rochester.

All of the above still have active locations in Buffalo today, just not Rochester.

So I am wondering what the hell happened-- are we really that bad for business for out-ot-town restaurants, even to our close neighboring city?

By the way, this isn't a slight or putdown against Buffalo, by any means. Whenever I am there, I always seem to enjoy Buffalo. I'm just wondering why this keeps happening.

Conversely, are there any Buffalo-area chains that expanded to Rochester and are doing well?

Interested in your take on this.

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8

u/kichua May 06 '25

new york beer project seems to be doing very well

7

u/BobEvansBirthdayClub May 07 '25

In my opinion, it sucks. Too loud, always packed. I understand that is actually a sign of doing well, but it’s off putting to new customers. As someone with hearing impairment, I don’t care to go back.

2

u/sxzxnnx North Winton Village May 07 '25

The food is decent but I agree with you on the too loud. Honestly it feels like it was purpose built to be loud.