Some Chapel Hill stores open, but others waiting to rebuild | Raleigh News & Observer
Alfredo’s Pizza Villa will move across the parking lot next month to the ground floor of the 900 Willow building. The Chamber for a Greater Chapel Hill-Carrboro is also trying to get the word out. Eastgate and Mariakakis Plaza were the hardest hit, suffering a total loss. “My sense is that most of those business owners — their heads are still spinning,” says Ian Scott, vice president for advocacy at the chamber.“I don’t think anybody thinks we’re open, because of what happened to the mall,’ said Alfredo Mendes, a native of Naples, Italy, and the owner of a pizza shop in Chapel Hill. ‘We’ve been through floods before, but this might be the worst. These are Chapel Hillians. These aren’t multimillion-dollar corporations,’ said Johnny Mariakaki, owner of Mariakakis Fine Food and Wine, which was trapped by floodwaters.
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AI-generated summary reviewed by our newsroom. Read our AI Policy. When Alfredo Mendes arrived at his Chapel Hill pizza shop early Monday morning, a sturdy mop took care of the water on the floor. He was “very lucky” compared to other University Place businesses, a few who are still struggling to reopen, said Mendes, a native of Naples, Italy, and the owner of Alfredo’s Pizza Villa. Remnants of Tropical Storm Chantal left many stores and restaurants in Chapel Hill submerged in 5 feet of water. Alfredo’s will move across the parking lot next month to the ground floor of the 900 Willow building after 26 years inside the mall. The new location didn’t flood, Mendes said, and will have all new equipment, new menu items, and draft beer, local brews and wine. For now, though, business is slow. “We put the word out on social media, on Facebook, but I don’t think anybody thinks we’re open, because of what happened to the mall,” Mendes said. The Chamber for a Greater Chapel Hill-Carrboro is also trying to get the word out, after chamber and town officials and others met with business owners from University Place, Eastgate Crossing and Mariakakis Plaza to hear their needs and concerns . Eastgate and Mariakakis Plaza were the hardest hit, suffering a total loss. At University Place, more businesses are open, but others remain closed: Stoney River Steakhouse, Silverspot Cinema, WakeMed 365, Chase Bank, First Horizon Bank, Planet Fitness, Style Brows Threading Studio, and The Soap and Shine. “My sense is that most of those business owners — their heads are still spinning,” said Ian Scott, vice president for advocacy at the chamber. “There are a few I know that are absolutely determined to reopen in their current location as quickly as possible,” he said. “Others are going to need to see what happens from insurance, and they’ve got some practical funding realities to consider, because they’ll have to do complete new updates and buy all new inventory, and a lot of them lost a lot of expensive equipment, and there won’t be short buildouts either.” At Mariakakis Plaza, the small, local shops perched above Booker Creek were cleaned out Wednesday. Plaza owner Johnny Mariakakis said he spent Sunday night in his store, Mariakakis Fine Food and Wine, trapped by floodwaters that destroyed his business and his car. His Greek immigrant parents opened Kwik-ee Takeout at that location in 1963 before transitioning to a popular sit-down business, Mariakakis’ Restaurant & Bakery. Mariakakis has been through floods before, but this might be the worst, he said. “We’re all local businesses. These are Chapel Hillians. These are not multimillion-dollar corporations,” Mariakakis said. “Grandmothers come in for sewing and yarn classes at Mary Stowe’s (Yarns, Etc. store), they bring their sewing machines to get repaired. The only shoe repair person in Chapel Hill-Carrboro is down there. She’s 82 years old, and she refuses to leave and she refuses to close.” Kathleen Fearrington, 55, sat outside The Shoe Repair watching a light drizzle fall Thursday. The insurance company refused to pay for their materials or to repair the store, she said, so they started a GoFundMe . Her mom, Cinderella Riggsbee, took over the 40-year-old business in the 1990s, and doesn’t want to give up, Fearrington said. They hope the equipment, some of it decades old, can be dried out and salvaged. “She said if she sits down, things are going to go wrong,” Fearrington said. “Her plan is to get it back up and running.” It will take money, Mariakakis said. His church, St. Barbara Greek Orthodox Church in Durham, has started a GoFundMe to help . Only two businesses, Chopt and T-Mobile, were open at Eastgate Crossing on Thursday. Tractor-trailers, recovery crews, and ductwork from industrial fans filled the parking lot. Guglhupf owner Sean Scott said his business was a total loss, and it’s still pretty chaotic. The chamber has been in touch, but the town “response has been all over the place” with letting tenants know what needs to be done and restoring the power. Insurance is also taking some time, he said. He was ordering new equipment Friday, but it will take a couple of weeks. If everything goes as planned, Guglhupt could reopen by August, Scott said. He’s planning in the meantime for a community fundraiser at their Durham location to help all the businesses and his employees, he said. “I think a strong community supports each other and, obviously, my team is my priority, but your business is only as strong as your community,” Scott said. “We’re hoping to do as much as we can for the others, too, in the process.” A fundraiser was launched to help Kipos employees , too, r estaurateur Giorgios Bakatsias said Monday as he surveyed the damage. A man pushed debris and water toward the front door with a broom, as wooden tabletops around him curled from being submerged. Pans and food from Sunday night sat abandoned in the kitchen. All of their equipment will have to be replaced, said Jay Mehdian, a partner in Giorgios Group. The water was moving so fast, it overwhelmed them, Bakatsias said, but they will reopen. “We have a great community, we’re doing very well, and it’s been a great location for us,” Bakatsias said. Chapel Hill Mayor Jessica Anderson toured the damage Monday and checked in with business owners midweek to learn more, she said. The level of damage in Eastgate and other places in town was “really sad,” she said. The first concern is getting businesses and residents back on their feet, Anderson said. “The staff worked tirelessly overnight, made sure everybody was safe, everybody was evacuated, who needed to be,” she said. But “with this level of climate change, with more severe storms coming through more regularly … there is going to be damage.” A disaster declaration could make more Small Business Administration programs, loans and employee assistance available, Scott said. The focus now is on getting the utilities back on and supporting business owners through the insurance claims process, he said. “That will be a major hinge point for a lot of these businesses on the timeline for reopening,” he said. Commercial landlords are typically responsible for structural damages, leaving tenants to insure personal property, such as materials and furnishings. Kite Realty officials did not immediately return an email seeking clarification about Eastgate’s insurance requirements. The town and the chamber are offering short-term and pop-up locations to affected businesses, and co-working space at The Junction downtown or in the chamber’s offices on South Estes Drive. The chamber has also set up a website to help business owners and share information about fundraisers and the South Estes Post Office, which remains closed. Learn more at carolinachamber.org/recover . In the Spotlight designates ongoing topics of high interest that are driven by The News & Observer’s focus on accountability reporting. This story was originally published July 12, 2025 at 7:00 AM. Try 1 month for $1