Share this Story : Fairouz Cafe in the ByWard Market to close, replaced by three new food-and-drink businesses Copy Link Email X Reddit Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Breadcrumb Trail Links Local Business News Local News Fairouz Cafe in the ByWard Market to close, replaced by three new food-and-drink businesses The owners of the Middle Eastern eatery on Clarence Street want to replace it with a steakhouse, a cocktail bar and a burger joint. Get the latest from Peter Hum straight to your inbox Sign Up Author of the article: Peter Hum Published Mar 26, 2025 • Last updated 29 minutes ago • 3 minute read Join the conversation You can save this article by registering for free here . Or sign-in if you have an account.
Fairouz Cafe in the ByWard Market is closing. Co-owners Tony Garcia (left) and Hussain Ruhal want to open a steakhouse, cocktail bar and burger joint to attract customers with different price points. Photo by Tony Caldwell / Postmedia Article content Fairouz Cafe on Clarence Street is to close in mid-April so that its owners can open three new food-and-drink businesses in the National Capital Commission-owned space.
“We’re trying to embrace a new style, a hybrid hospitality space,” says co-owner Tony Garcia. His Middle Eastern restaurant, which will mark its 10th anniversary next month, is to have its last service on April 12. Garcia hopes that just a few weeks later in the Fairouz space, he will be able to open a steakhouse called Sussex & Co.
and a cocktail bar called Little Sussex. A third brand, a burger business called Burger Bar, is to open later this year, according to his plan. Advertisement 2 Story continues below This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
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Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Sign In or Create an Account Email Address Continue or View more offers If you are a Home delivery print subscriber, online access is included in your subscription. Activate your Online Access Now Article content The cocktail bar will be in the front of Fairouz’s space, while the steakhouse will be in the rear and include the rear patio. The side patio will become the burger business, Garcia says.
“We’ve survived through trucker things and the pandemic, we have wonderful regulars,” says Garcia. But there comes a time when you make a decision. The world is changing.
” The idea behind the hybrid business is to attract more customers with three concepts and price points. Garcia says business at Fairouz has been “up and down” and “quite unpredictable” in recent years. In the first few years after the pandemic, Fairouz’s patios were full, but he also thinks that tourist traffic is down in the ByWard Market.
The switch-up at 15 Clarence St. is the latest high-profile change in the landscape in the ByWard Market, as the historic neighbourhood’s businesses and residents continue to grapple with homelessness, crime and other issues . On Dalhousie Street, Dunn’s Famous Deli closed March 23, and a Chuck’s Roadhouse location is to replace it.
Blue Cactus Bar and Grill closed after its New Year’s Eve party, and Grey’s Social Eatery recently opened in its place . Evening Update The Ottawa Citizen’s best journalism, delivered directly to your inbox by 7 p.m.
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Article content While business in the ByWard Market has been inconsistent, Garcia says he wants to stay there. He’s encouraged that Live Nation Canada is to open a spacious night club next year , about three blocks from his Clarence Street location. He thinks Ottawa Tourism and the ByWard Market District Authority can improve the fortunes of the neighbourhood’s businesses.
“I think the timing is right to offer a couple of different concepts,” Garcia says. Tony Garcia (left) and Hussain Ruhal, the co-owners of Fairouz, pose for a photo Tuesday Photo by Tony Caldwell / Postmedia He says he had been looking into opening his multi-brand venue in the former Earl of Sussex Pub, another NCC-owned space just a block north of Fairouz Cafe. But the renovations for that project would have been too expensive, and it made more sense to makeover Fairouz’s space, Garcia says.
Fairouz opened in the spring of 2016 as a Middle Eastern fine-dining restaurant in Centretown on Somerset Street West. A year after it opened, Fairouz appeared on the “Canada’s 100 Best Restaurants” list. Advertisement 4 Story continues below This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content But following the initial disruptions of the COVID-19 pandemic, it relocated to Clarence Street and re-launched in October 2020 as a more relaxed eatery, Fairouz Cafe, where its food was also available for takeout and delivery. The Fairouz name goes back to the 1990s on Ottawa’s restaurant scene. The first Fairouz was located at 343 Somerset St.
W., and that was the address of the fine-dining iteration of Fairouz that Garcia and his business partner Hussain Rahal opened in 2016. Trofi , a Greek restaurant, now occupies that address.
[email protected] Recommended from Editorial Hum: 25 of the most iconic Ottawa restaurant dishes, from egg rolls and pizza to fine-dining Adam: Fixing the ByWard Market — we'll still need places to park Article content Share this article in your social network Share this Story : Fairouz Cafe in the ByWard Market to close, replaced by three new food-and-drink businesses Copy Link Email X Reddit Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Comments You must be logged in to join the discussion or read more comments. Create an Account Sign in Join the Conversation Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion.
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Fairouz Cafe in the ByWard Market to close, replaced by three new food-and-drink businesses

The owners of the Middle Eastern eatery on Clarence Street want to replace it with a steakhouse, a cocktail bar and a burger joint.