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- Plonk in is closing next month, due to low foot traffic and in the CBD.
- Stephen Morris of Yu Group said they had to close last year, but opened six.
- Morris said current are the toughest they鈥檝e been since 2008.
A central Wellington wine bar has confirmed it is closing, blaming fewer people in the CBD for declining business.
Plonk opened on the corner of Customhouse Quay and Johnston Street in October 2023.
It describes itself as offering a mix of local and worldly wines with a food menu inspired by French classics.
The site was previously home to Yu Group鈥檚 award-winning restaurant Atlas, which closed in 2023 with the group citing a decreased appetite for fine dining.
鈥淭he team at Plonk are sad to say that we will be closing our doors on the 2nd of March,鈥 a post on social media states.
鈥淭o our loyal customers, staff, and star suppliers, we could not have done the past two years without you, and thank you from the bottom of our hearts for this incredible journey.鈥
Plonk opened in October 2023, but Yu Group says low foot traffic has meant it's unsustainable and will close next month. Photo / Wellington NZ
Wellington鈥檚 hospitality scene faced last year, including , Nikau Cafe and , due to economic challenges and construction disruption.
Plonk is owned by hospitality group Yu Group, which announced in September last year it had 鈥渕ade the difficult decision鈥 to close The Hudson bar nearby, due to declining foot traffic in the area.
Stephen Morris, who is responsible for Yu Group鈥檚 front-of-house operations, told the Herald that a lack of people in the area was to blame for the decision to close the business.
鈥淭here鈥檚 less people walking along the streets.鈥
Asked what is causing the reduced foot traffic in the area, Morris said he 鈥渨ouldn鈥檛 want to speculate on the work-from-home, the public sector cuts, I can just tell you that there are less people in the city鈥.
鈥淭he existing car parks on the streets are empty more often than they were two years ago.鈥
Morris said the business tried things to bring people in like jazz shows on a Thursday, which did work, but couldn鈥檛 translate it into increased patronage throughout the week.
鈥淥ver the last 18 months, we just haven鈥檛 got enough traction to make it wash its face and so it鈥檚 time to stop, regroup, and come up with another plan.
鈥淎ny closure is always fraught, there鈥檚 a human cost, there鈥檚 people we鈥檝e worked with for the past 18 months, quite a few of them we have redeployed within the group but there are a couple who we won鈥檛.鈥
He said they will be retaining the lease of the site, which will act as an overflow kitchen for Yu Group, but won鈥檛 open as a new venue in the short-term.
鈥淵ou鈥檝e always got to be reinventing yourself,鈥 he said.
Morris said despite the struggles in the sector, Yu Group has remained 鈥渂uoyant鈥, closing three venues but opening six.
2024 saw the Hudson, Cinderella and Corso Pastaria, located in Willis Lane, close.
Morris said he鈥檚 been working in hospitality in Wellington for 35 years and said the current period is as tough as he鈥檚 seen it since 2008.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a cyclical market, it鈥檚 boom and bust.鈥
Yu Group also , which he hopes to open by the end of March after the fit-out is finished and a liquor licence is granted.
The new venue will be named Little Astoria, Morris said.
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