Eatery to bask in red glow
Historic site to house upscale restaurant
By Steve Lackmeyer
Business Writer
The lights on Broadway soon will be red in a building that housed one of Oklahoma City's earliest automobile dealerships.
Renovation has begun and a June opening is scheduled for the Red Prime Steakhouse. It will be the first upscale eatery to open along downtown Oklahoma City's Automobile Alley.
The Buick Building, built in 1911 at 504 N Broadway, has been empty for more than a decade. Once complete, the renovated landmark, designed by building owner and architect Rand Elliott, will reflect the new eatery's name, with emphasis on "red.”
Designs unveiled by Elliott and restaurant operators Keith and Heather Paul show the restaurant will be bathed in a red neon glow, provided by 100 light fixtures hung from cables along the ceiling and walls.
"It's red, like the people of Oklahoma, red like the dirt of Oklahoma — red meat, red wine,” Keith Paul said. "The steaks will be the focus. But we're not just looking at doing prime beef, but also having a dry-aged product or two, and some Kobe items — not the ones people are used to. We may also have some grass-fed steaks. It will be a fun menu.”
Elliott said preparations for the restaurant started six months ago, and it is a team effort involving himself and his wife, Jeanette, who is a creative director with Ackerman McQueen; developer Chuck Ainsworth; and the Pauls, who also own Cheever's Cafe and Iron Star Urban BBQ.
For a hint of the red neon at the new eatery, Elliott recommends visiting Cheever's which also has similar lighting.
Elliott, whose portfolio includes the Chesapeake Boathouse, promises the Red Prime Steakhouse will be both a culinary and sensory treat for patrons.
"As a guest, you arrive through the historic doors, you're received and you come around the corner where there is a 38-foot-wide, 16-foot-high wine wall,” Elliott said. "We're very excited about this. Keith and Heather will be displaying about 300 varieties of wine.”
The wall will be transparent, with a rolling ladder attached for a steward to pull out bottles from the top row.
Customers will be greeted through what Elliott calls the "procession of the space” — a central avenue of the restaurant with a focus on the food.
"You will walk by, see Keith in the exhibition kitchen, and there will be excitement in the preparation of the food, the quality and the experience,” Elliott said.
A half dozen 8-foot-tall circular booths will serve as private dining areas throughout the restaurant.
The booths were requested by the Pauls to accommodate private parties, and were inspired by a large automotive turntable in the rear of the building.
"What we did was to make it a special dining room for eight,” Elliott said. "It will be above the ground, so you can see the turntable underneath it.”
With the 18-foot-high ceiling, the designers also had to pay special attention to acoustics, Jeanette Elliott said.
"You want the energy and totality of it, but you also want the ability to have some privacy,” she said.
Free parking will surround the restaurant, which also will provide valet service nightly. The Pauls anticipate the market for their restaurant will quickly evolve as residents buy condominiums being constructed one block east in the Flat Iron district and in Deep Deuce.
"It might bring in a younger crowd than we originally thought — maybe early 30s, late 20s,” Keith Paul said. "But I think all of this will result in nothing but positive things for us.”
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