Lilly Pad restaurant turning over a new leaf

LillyPad1

The remodeled Lilly Pad Cafe building at Kingsland Marina. (Photos courtesy Max Walraven)

As state dining restrictions begin to relax with the prospect of limited outdoor seating, the new owner of a seasonal restaurant along the river in eastern Henrico is expecting to capitalize on the times when he reopens his revamped version in coming weeks.

Max Walraven, who last year took over operations of the Kingsland Marina at 9680 Osborne Turnpike, is putting the finishing touches on updates to the marinaโ€™s dockside restaurant, the Lilly Pad Cafรฉ, which he likewise purchased in 2019 and aims to open June 1.

Marinas1

Max Walraven at Kingsland Marina. (BizSense file photo)

Walraven owns and operates the Lilly Pad with his wife Karen. He said they’ve put about $250,000 into renovating the restaurant, including upgrades to the building, kitchen and operations. They’re also upgrading the menu, with input from some notable names in Richmondโ€™s dining scene.

While its dining room will remain closed in accordance with state rules, and despite being new to the restaurant business, the 36-year-old Hawaii nativeย is betting the Lilly Pad will do well in the age of social distancing thanks to its ample outdoor seating that he expects to capitalize on as restrictions are relaxed.

The first phase of Gov. Ralph Northamโ€™s plan to start reopening the economy, which was set to start today, allows restaurants with outdoor seating to provide open-air dining at 50 percent capacity. Walraven said he has enough outdoor seating to accommodate 85 diners โ€“ or 42 at half-capacity.

โ€œPeople, I think, are just itching to be outdoors now because of quarantine, so I think we are really well-positioned to capture all the business,โ€ Walraven said. โ€œI think that people arenโ€™t going to rush to (a restaurant) and want to sit next to a table of 10 other people when Northam opens up the state. Just because theyโ€™re lifting these restrictions, youโ€™re not going to want to go and pack a movie theater immediately.โ€

LillyPad2

Renovations to the building and grounds have been underway for months.

Since he started making improvements to Kingsland last year, Walraven said word-of-mouth helped Lilly Padโ€™s business surge during the summer to five times what it brought in in previous seasons. He said the restaurant, which typically is open May to October, brought in about $500,000 in business last year, compared to about $100,000 in previous years.

โ€œIt went from kind of a secret spot to blowing up,โ€ Walraven said of the restaurant.

Remodeled building

Improvements to the restaurant include a fryer and brick pizza oven in the kitchen, which he said can now accommodate more orders at a time. Heโ€™s also added a point-of-sale system for staff, a step up from the restaurantโ€™s previous single cash register.

A to-go window has been installed to accommodate pickup orders, now essential in the age of coronavirus. Likewise with dining restrictions in mind, Walraven said heโ€™s also eyeing food delivery service โ€“ but not to houses per se.

LillyPad5

The restaurant’s new kitchen includes a brick pizza oven.

โ€œWeโ€™re legitimately talking about jet ski pizza delivery,โ€ he said. โ€œThere are hundreds of boats out on the weekend; why not treat them like moving houses? Weโ€™ll deliver a pizza down the street; why wouldnโ€™t we deliver a pizza on the water?โ€

For the menu, Walravenโ€™s adding onto the Lilly Padโ€™s burgers and bar-food fare with dishes heโ€™s developing with help from some seasoned area chefs. Consultants have included Mamma Zuโ€™s Javier Maury and Billy Bread-maker Antbear Bakery, which Walraven said has been helping with sourdough recipes for his pizzas. He said heโ€™s lining up a kitchen manager.

Walraven said heโ€™s keeping some of its old favorites and intends to maintain a range of prices, from $10 lunches to pricier dinner options. Wraps, salads and locally sourced produce will be added as well to serve cyclists stopping off Osborne Turnpike.

Despite the enhancements to the menu and restaurant overall, Walraven said heโ€™s not looking to change what patrons have come to know as the Lilly Pad. Acknowledging some initial pushback from regulars, Walraven said, โ€œI think a lot of the people at the restaurant thought this guyโ€™s going to make it a new Rocketts Landing. Thatโ€™s not my intention.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s everymanโ€™s marina,โ€ Walraven said. โ€œPeople who may have thought heโ€™s going to change it all and make it unaffordable and too fancy, very quickly all those people who were kind of grumbling behind the scenes are now allies and friends. They saw what I was doing with the restaurant; they saw it immediately got better.โ€

Changing hands

LillyPad6

The dockside restaurant features views of the James River.

Since purchasing a majority stake in Kingsland last year, as he did years before with the nearby Richmond Yacht Basin marina, Walraven had been leasing the Lilly Pad to its previous operator, Jo Ann Mattern, who had run the restaurant for the past three years.

When Matternโ€™s lease came up for renewal last year, Walraven said they didnโ€™t agree on new terms and he purchased the restaurant, including rights to the name, social media and other assets. He and Karen are operating under a new entity called The Lilly Pad LLC.

Attempts to reach Mattern for comment were unsuccessful Thursday.

Dating back to the early 2000s, Lilly Pad is named for its original owner, Candace Atkins, whose first name is Lillian, Walraven said. A mural painted on the side of the converted tackle shop incorrectly spells the restaurantโ€™s name as โ€œThe Lily Pad Cafรฉ,โ€ but Walraven said heโ€™s keeping the mural despite the error.

Marinas4

Theย Lillyย Pad as it appeared last year.ย (BizSense file photo)

He worked with local contractor Drew Miller on the remodel, with design and drafting help from contractor John George, whose area projects include The Tiber condos in the Libbie and Grove area.

The building now features floor-to-ceiling glass, hand-fabricated copper bar tops, hand-milled timber window frames, and reclaimed metals and woods from area warehouses. A 6,000-square-foot hardscaped patio and new docks have been added outside, and Walraven said he’s building a new stage for weekly concerts.

While the remodel is timing out well with the coronavirus, depending on oneโ€™s perspective, Walraven said the project wasnโ€™t motivated by it and was in the works months before the pandemic hit.

โ€œWe were going to be shut down anyway, so this has been almost a blessing to kind of slow everything down and just be ready for when everyone reopens,โ€ Walraven said.

โ€œSome places are closing, some people donโ€™t know how theyโ€™re going to survive. Weโ€™re ready,โ€ he said. โ€œWe are positioning ourselves to capture every person who walks through here.โ€

As for Kingsland overall, Walraven is still planning to dredge the marinaโ€™s inlet and boat slips โ€“ an effort he said heโ€™s coordinating around the stateโ€™s plan to dredge the adjacent Osborne Boat Landing.

He also remains in a legal fight with the marinaโ€™s previous operators, Henry and Michaele Upshur, who sued him following his majority stake purchase claiming they were supposed to have first dibs on the property. A hearing in that case was to be held last month but is now scheduled for August, a delay Walraven attributed to the coronavirus shutdown.

Marinas2

The 13-acre Kingsland Marina, beside Osborne Par and Boat Landing, includes 800 feet of river frontage. (Courtesy Max Walraven)

LillyPad1

The remodeled Lilly Pad Cafe building at Kingsland Marina. (Photos courtesy Max Walraven)

As state dining restrictions begin to relax with the prospect of limited outdoor seating, the new owner of a seasonal restaurant along the river in eastern Henrico is expecting to capitalize on the times when he reopens his revamped version in coming weeks.

Max Walraven, who last year took over operations of the Kingsland Marina at 9680 Osborne Turnpike, is putting the finishing touches on updates to the marinaโ€™s dockside restaurant, the Lilly Pad Cafรฉ, which he likewise purchased in 2019 and aims to open June 1.

Marinas1

Max Walraven at Kingsland Marina. (BizSense file photo)

Walraven owns and operates the Lilly Pad with his wife Karen. He said they’ve put about $250,000 into renovating the restaurant, including upgrades to the building, kitchen and operations. They’re also upgrading the menu, with input from some notable names in Richmondโ€™s dining scene.

While its dining room will remain closed in accordance with state rules, and despite being new to the restaurant business, the 36-year-old Hawaii nativeย is betting the Lilly Pad will do well in the age of social distancing thanks to its ample outdoor seating that he expects to capitalize on as restrictions are relaxed.

The first phase of Gov. Ralph Northamโ€™s plan to start reopening the economy, which was set to start today, allows restaurants with outdoor seating to provide open-air dining at 50 percent capacity. Walraven said he has enough outdoor seating to accommodate 85 diners โ€“ or 42 at half-capacity.

โ€œPeople, I think, are just itching to be outdoors now because of quarantine, so I think we are really well-positioned to capture all the business,โ€ Walraven said. โ€œI think that people arenโ€™t going to rush to (a restaurant) and want to sit next to a table of 10 other people when Northam opens up the state. Just because theyโ€™re lifting these restrictions, youโ€™re not going to want to go and pack a movie theater immediately.โ€

LillyPad2

Renovations to the building and grounds have been underway for months.

Since he started making improvements to Kingsland last year, Walraven said word-of-mouth helped Lilly Padโ€™s business surge during the summer to five times what it brought in in previous seasons. He said the restaurant, which typically is open May to October, brought in about $500,000 in business last year, compared to about $100,000 in previous years.

โ€œIt went from kind of a secret spot to blowing up,โ€ Walraven said of the restaurant.

Remodeled building

Improvements to the restaurant include a fryer and brick pizza oven in the kitchen, which he said can now accommodate more orders at a time. Heโ€™s also added a point-of-sale system for staff, a step up from the restaurantโ€™s previous single cash register.

A to-go window has been installed to accommodate pickup orders, now essential in the age of coronavirus. Likewise with dining restrictions in mind, Walraven said heโ€™s also eyeing food delivery service โ€“ but not to houses per se.

LillyPad5

The restaurant’s new kitchen includes a brick pizza oven.

โ€œWeโ€™re legitimately talking about jet ski pizza delivery,โ€ he said. โ€œThere are hundreds of boats out on the weekend; why not treat them like moving houses? Weโ€™ll deliver a pizza down the street; why wouldnโ€™t we deliver a pizza on the water?โ€

For the menu, Walravenโ€™s adding onto the Lilly Padโ€™s burgers and bar-food fare with dishes heโ€™s developing with help from some seasoned area chefs. Consultants have included Mamma Zuโ€™s Javier Maury and Billy Bread-maker Antbear Bakery, which Walraven said has been helping with sourdough recipes for his pizzas. He said heโ€™s lining up a kitchen manager.

Walraven said heโ€™s keeping some of its old favorites and intends to maintain a range of prices, from $10 lunches to pricier dinner options. Wraps, salads and locally sourced produce will be added as well to serve cyclists stopping off Osborne Turnpike.

Despite the enhancements to the menu and restaurant overall, Walraven said heโ€™s not looking to change what patrons have come to know as the Lilly Pad. Acknowledging some initial pushback from regulars, Walraven said, โ€œI think a lot of the people at the restaurant thought this guyโ€™s going to make it a new Rocketts Landing. Thatโ€™s not my intention.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s everymanโ€™s marina,โ€ Walraven said. โ€œPeople who may have thought heโ€™s going to change it all and make it unaffordable and too fancy, very quickly all those people who were kind of grumbling behind the scenes are now allies and friends. They saw what I was doing with the restaurant; they saw it immediately got better.โ€

Changing hands

LillyPad6

The dockside restaurant features views of the James River.

Since purchasing a majority stake in Kingsland last year, as he did years before with the nearby Richmond Yacht Basin marina, Walraven had been leasing the Lilly Pad to its previous operator, Jo Ann Mattern, who had run the restaurant for the past three years.

When Matternโ€™s lease came up for renewal last year, Walraven said they didnโ€™t agree on new terms and he purchased the restaurant, including rights to the name, social media and other assets. He and Karen are operating under a new entity called The Lilly Pad LLC.

Attempts to reach Mattern for comment were unsuccessful Thursday.

Dating back to the early 2000s, Lilly Pad is named for its original owner, Candace Atkins, whose first name is Lillian, Walraven said. A mural painted on the side of the converted tackle shop incorrectly spells the restaurantโ€™s name as โ€œThe Lily Pad Cafรฉ,โ€ but Walraven said heโ€™s keeping the mural despite the error.

Marinas4

Theย Lillyย Pad as it appeared last year.ย (BizSense file photo)

He worked with local contractor Drew Miller on the remodel, with design and drafting help from contractor John George, whose area projects include The Tiber condos in the Libbie and Grove area.

The building now features floor-to-ceiling glass, hand-fabricated copper bar tops, hand-milled timber window frames, and reclaimed metals and woods from area warehouses. A 6,000-square-foot hardscaped patio and new docks have been added outside, and Walraven said he’s building a new stage for weekly concerts.

While the remodel is timing out well with the coronavirus, depending on oneโ€™s perspective, Walraven said the project wasnโ€™t motivated by it and was in the works months before the pandemic hit.

โ€œWe were going to be shut down anyway, so this has been almost a blessing to kind of slow everything down and just be ready for when everyone reopens,โ€ Walraven said.

โ€œSome places are closing, some people donโ€™t know how theyโ€™re going to survive. Weโ€™re ready,โ€ he said. โ€œWe are positioning ourselves to capture every person who walks through here.โ€

As for Kingsland overall, Walraven is still planning to dredge the marinaโ€™s inlet and boat slips โ€“ an effort he said heโ€™s coordinating around the stateโ€™s plan to dredge the adjacent Osborne Boat Landing.

He also remains in a legal fight with the marinaโ€™s previous operators, Henry and Michaele Upshur, who sued him following his majority stake purchase claiming they were supposed to have first dibs on the property. A hearing in that case was to be held last month but is now scheduled for August, a delay Walraven attributed to the coronavirus shutdown.

Marinas2

The 13-acre Kingsland Marina, beside Osborne Par and Boat Landing, includes 800 feet of river frontage. (Courtesy Max Walraven)

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Bruce Milam
Bruce Milam
4 years ago

it’s a hidden jewel on the river. you’d never know its there without seeking it out, and finally someone is improving it! I’ve heard rumors of some great live music shows there.

Max Matthews
Max Matthews
4 years ago

Lilly Pad was perfect just the way it was. Another Richmond institution lost to more bland, overpriced yuppie crap.

Max
Max
4 years ago
Reply to  Max Matthews

Hope to see you there too ๐Ÿ˜‰

John Lindner
John Lindner
4 years ago

Hmmm. Mixed feelings. I’m happy to see the reinvestment but I will miss the dive bar quality of the original. Let’s hope they bring back burger nite.

Max
Max
4 years ago
Reply to  John Lindner

Burger night isnโ€™t going anywhere! Hope to see you there.