When word got out about the impending closure of Leyenda, a fixture in its Brooklyn, New York, neighborhood, the place started filling up early every night.
“Everyone wants to get a piece now that we're closing,” owner Ivy Mix said with a laugh. “I mean, I get it. I've gone to places when they close. But the other part of me is like, ‘Where were you? Where were you, though?’”
Mix opened Leyenda, a pan-Latin cocktail bar and restaurant, in the upscale Boerum Hill area in the spring of 2015. In early 2025, she and her co-owners decided not to renew their lease, joining a growing list of small, independent restaurants shutting down. The list includes lots of places that have been around for years, some famous, like Marlow & Sons and the Pencil Factory
, and others that are beloved locally.
“There’s many reasons,” Mix said. “The restaurant-bar industry is difficult. It's become more difficult over time, the whole country over, but I think New York City is not necessarily the most hospitable place for small businesses a lot of the time.” Rent, which has always been high in the city, has become much more expensive in the last few years, since the pandemic. Insurance has, too, along with almost everything else — utilities, food, labor.
“Labor is big,” Mix said. “I'm the type of person that thinks that it should go up. But as a business owner, I'm like, ‘Whoa!’ If you look at our labor costs now compared to 2017, it's a huge difference.”
Credit card processing fees are also taking an increasingly big chunk out of many restaurants’ already-thin profit margins — every time someone pays with a card, which is all the time, 2% to 4% goes to the credit card companies. “At the end of every month, it's like, here you go, Mastercard and Visa,” Mix said. “Here's all this money.” It all adds up in a business where, if you’re doing really well, you’re making maybe 10 cents on the dollar.
“At the end of the day, we're like, is the juice worth the squeeze?” she said. “Like, maybe not. Maybe not right now, maybe not like this, maybe not this iteration.” |