Bridgehead Coffee

Bridgehead is a fair trade coffeehouse chain based in Ottawa, Ontario. In addition to coffee and organic teas, it sells soups, salads, sandwiches and snacks made in its own kitchen.[1] In November 2006, Bridgehead was voted Ottawa's "Best Coffee/Tea House" by readers of lifestyle weekly Ottawa XPress.[2] Bridgehead also sells coffee by mail through its website.

Bridgehead
coffeehouse
Founded1981 (1981)
Headquarters,
Area served
Ottawa
Productscoffee, tea, juice, kombucha, bread
Websitehttps://www.bridgehead.ca/

History

Bridgehead was formed in Toronto, Ontario, originally as Bridgehead Trading, in 1981, by two United Church ministers and two social activists who were concerned with small-scale coffee farmers in Nicaragua.[3]

Bridgehead was the first company to offer Canadian consumers fairly traded coffee, as a group of volunteers sold coffee from the basements of churches in Toronto. The business grew rapidly and was soon acquired by Oxfam Canada in 1984.[3]

Under Oxfam Canada, Bridgehead became a formally incorporated, for-profit company. Oxfam Canada's aim was not to focus on the coffee that Bridgehead was funded and grew from, but to bring in a more diverse fair-trade product line. This eventually led to a decrease in profits and eventually a dip into losses.[3] A profile of Bridgehead's post-Oxfam management in the Ottawa Citizen claimed that Oxfam Canada's Bridgehead ultimately failed in the mid-1990s due in part to a "lack of sound business practices."[4]

In May 1998, Bridgehead was acquired by Shared Interest. This U.K. based lending society held the Bridgehead name in hopes of finding a buyer. Shared Interest only needed to hold the name for a year as in 1999; an offer arrived from Tracey Clark.[3]

Clark wanted to restore Bridgehead to its former status as a fair-trade coffee and tea company. In April 2000, Bridgehead Inc. was formed, and on June 17, 2000, the first Bridgehead Coffeehouse opened at 362 Richmond Road in Westboro, Ottawa, Ontario.[3] Clark originally relied on financing from family and friends, but by 2002, Bridgehead was owned by 30 investors.[5] Also in 2002, Clark opened a central kitchen to serve Bridgehead's line of food products. [6] Bridgehead expanded from one outlet in 2000[7] to nine by 2008,[8] and currently operates twenty outlets, requiring the company to provide calorie counts for all of its food products.[9][10]

June 2012 marked the opening of Bridgehead's own roastery, which is now where all of the coffee that is sold by the company is roasted.[3] A further development is the introduction of alcohol to Bridgeheads beverage lineup. In July 2015, According to the reports, Bridgehead Coffee opened a 1,850-square-foot location in a six-storey office at the corner of Pinecrest road and Iris Street.[11] As of September 2015, select Bridgehead locations began to offer beer from local breweries Beau's and Beyond the Pale, as well as wine and coffee-inspired cocktails.[12] In 2017, Bridgehead began working with Carleton University's Mass Spectrometry Centre to uncover answers about how coffee beans age on a cellular level.[13]

In December 2019, the company announced it was being sold to Aegis Brands, parent company of the Second Cup coffee chain.

Locations

Bridgehead Coffee has 20 locations in the Ottawa region.[9]

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gollark: 32 registers would probably allow room for more fun stuff, like the program metacounter register.
gollark: Unless I decide to upgrade to 32 registers, in which case it would only allow 5 max.
gollark: Very late, but PotatoASM can probably handle syscalls of up to 6 parameters, which is surely enough for ANY possible usecase, through passing a bunch of register indices as operands to the `SYSC` instruction.

See also

References

  1. Coffee Houses Archived 2013-08-23 at the Wayback Machine Bridgehead website. Retrieved August 13, 2007.
  2. "Ottawa Xpress, 23 November 2006 (The annual "Best of Ottawa" issue)". Archived from the original on 21 February 2007. Retrieved 26 November 2006.
  3. "History". www.bridgehead.ca. Retrieved 2015-11-12.
  4. Chianello, Joanne (2002) "Bridgehead bounces back: Sticking to your ethics can work as long as the business plan is based on more than good intentions" in Ottawa Citizen Archived 2013-07-31 at the Wayback Machine (May 4, 2002), p.H1, H4.
  5. Chianello, 2002:H4
  6. "At 10,000 cups a day and counting, Bridgehead branches out". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  7. Cook, Gay (2000) "Bridgehead Offers Coffee with a Difference" in Ottawa Citizen (July 12, 2000)
  8. Bridgehead.ca "Locations" at http://www.bridgehead.ca/en/AboutUs/locations.asp Archived 2007-06-08 at the Wayback Machine
  9. "After posting calorie counts, Bridgehead sees customers changing their orders". CBC. Retrieved 2019-01-15.
  10. Bridgehead [@Bridgehead] (4 August 2015). "Iris and Greenbank is now open! Come and visit our 16th store on its opening day. Hats off to Jen & everyone making this happen!!" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  11. "Bridgehead to open shop near Ikea, adds licensed patio to the mix". Ottawa Citizen. 2015-07-27. Retrieved 2017-11-17.
  12. "Bridgehead to start serving liquor in September". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 2015-11-12.
  13. "Brewing Better Business: Carleton and Bridgehead Research a Coffee Conundrum". Carleton Stories. Retrieved 2017-02-08.

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