La Colombe Secures $28.5 Million Investment, Plans Coastal Expansion

Photo courtesy of La Colombe
Philadelphia-based roaster and retailer
La Colombe has signed a deal for approximately $28.5 million worth of
private investments, with plans to open upwards of 100 new cafes in major U.S. cities over the next five years.
Todd Carmichael, who founded La Colombe in 1993 with his friend and
business partner JP Iberti, said the deal was signed Aug. 31, on his
51st birthday, following months of
contact with investors. “Thank God I never have to do that again,” Carmichael told Daily Coffee News by phone today. “It was like the
Brewers Cup with guys in suits.”
The investment comes as La Colombe is putting the finishing touches on its
most ambitious facility to date, a coffee headquarters, lab, bakery and distillery that Carmichael said may open late next week in Philly’s Fishtown.
“We’ve gotten to the 20-year mark,” Carmichael said of La Colombe.
“JP and I, we kind of work in five year shifts, where we say, ‘What are
we going to do for the next five years?’ This time we wondered if we
should take it easy or
step on the gas, and we did the latter.”
Carmichael said seven new leases for retail locations have already
been signed, most of which are in markets in which La Colombe already
operates, including Philadelphia, Washington D.C., Chicago and New York,
but the company is also looking at moving into Boston, Baltimore, and
parts of the West coast.
“We’ve found some great locations focused in our area but we’re always
shopping,”
Carmichael said. “I really respect what is going on in California.
Having the ability to be involved in New York, Chicago and L.A. — I’d
love to be in those communities.”

Carmichael on the set of “Dangerous Grounds”
The company could also make some moves in the Northwest. “It’s kind
of like the Odyssey,” Carmichael said. “No huge voyage is complete
without the main character going
home.
So there’s always this idea that I’d like to go back and open a couple
cafes in Seattle. I learned to roast in the Bay area in Oakland, and in
San Francisco, but I really became a coffee man in Seattle. I’m always
looking West because there’s something romantic in that.”
It is difficult Carmichael has much time for romanticism these
days. In addition to the running the distillery and the Fishtown
opening, the star of the Travel Channel’s
“Dangerous Grounds” still has three
more
episodes to film in season three; he’s just decided to compete again in
the U.S. Brewers Cup; and he’s just released his own brewing device,
The Dragon.
“It’s been a busy year,” he said.
It’s about to be a busy five years, although Carmichael suggests that
La Colombe’s two-decade pattern of slow growth have built it to the
point that it can absorb such a hefty investment.
“For me, the rule of thumb was always, I never sold a share, ever,”
Carmichael says. “It was me and JP, 50/50, and all the money we put
right back into the company. You need the company to get big enough that
it can really help itself.”
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