Next (restaurant)


Next is a restaurant in Chicago. It opened April 6, 2011.
The restaurant received media interest due to chef Grant Achatz's success at his first restaurant, Alinea, as well as its unique "ticketed" format: Next sells pre-priced tickets for specific dates and times in a similar fashion to the way theater, concert and sporting event tickets are sold.

Property

Next is located in Chicago's historic Fulton Market, just north of the West Loop's "Restaurant Row" on Randolph Street.
Next's operation also includes two on-site bars: The Aviary, previously headed by Charles Joly, and presently headed by Micah Melton, and The Office, an invite-only speakeasy-format bar that seats 14 and is located behind an unmarked metal door in the basement of the building.

Menus

Rather than stick with one type of cuisine, Next completely changes its style every few months, focusing on a different time period, parts of the world, or various abstract themes for each "season" of its menu.
While themes for the year are often released at the end of the previous season, menu development for each of the season's themes begins in final weeks of the previous menu. Executive chef Jenner Tomaska and Grant Achatz head this process.
These are the past, present, and future menus of Next Restaurant:
Start DateEnd DateTheme
April 6, 2011June 30, 2011"Paris: 1906"
July 8, 2011October 9, 2011"Thailand"
October 22, 2011January 29, 2012"Childhood"
February 8, 2012May 27, 2012"elBulli"
June 2, 2012September 9, 2012"Sicily"
September 15, 2012December 31, 2012"kaiseki"
January 9, 2013April 28, 2013"The Hunt"
May 8, 2013August 24, 2013"Vegan"
August 31, 2013December 31, 2013"Bocuse d'Or"
January 2014April 2014"Chicago Steakhouse"
May 2014August 2014"Chinese:Modern"
September 2014December 2014"Trio, January 20, 2004"
January 2015May 2015"Bistro"
May 2015September 2015"Tapas"
September 2015December 2015"Terroir"
January 2016March 2016"The Alps"
April 2016August 2016"Tour of South America"
September 2016December 2016"The French Laundry: October 28th, 1996"
January 2017April 2017"Ancient Rome"
May 2017August 2017"Hollywood"
August 2017December 2017"World's 50 Best"
January 2018April 2018"French: Cuisine Classique"
April 2018June 2018"French: Cuisine Nouvelle"
June 2018September 2018"Alinea: 2005-2010"
October 2018January 2019"Alinea: 2011-2015"
January 2019April 2019"Silk & Spice"
May 2019August 2019"Italia"
August 2019January 2020"José Andrés: World Central Kitchen"

Planned experiences in 2020 include: "Tokyo", "Mexico City", and "The Fat Duck".

Tickets

Through the "Childhood" menu, Next sold tickets through their website in batches. Several tables would be opened up, and announcements were made on their Facebook and Twitter pages when tickets were available. The tickets sold rapidly. Next tickets are transferable, but not refundable or exchangeable. This has sparked the creation of a secondary market for the tickets, which has resulted in reports of people scalping the tickets for several times their face value.
In an attempt to eliminate the secondary market on Next tickets, the sales model was changed in 2012 to follow a season ticket model, where in-advance tickets were only available if patrons purchased tickets for one meal from each of the restaurant's seasonal menus being offered for the year. Additional benefits were given along with the season tickets with the stipulation that if the tickets were sold, these additional benefits would be lost. For the 2012 season, the wait list during ticket purchasing reached a queue of over 6,600 people. With just over 900 packages available in total for the year, the people who were able to buy the tickets were in line within 8–10 seconds of their release.
Next also releases "Same-Day" tickets via their Facebook . They guarantee there will be at least one table available via Facebook every day they are open.
Next, Alinea, and The Aviary, each in their own right, served as a testing and development ground for Nick Kokonas's proprietary ticketing system. Kokonas's system allows for dynamic pricing for restaurant tickets/reservations. The system, now held under a new company called Tock, is being commercially offered to restaurants around the country and the world. Some of the earliest adopters include, Thomas Keller's The French Laundry and Per Se and Daniel Patterson's Coi.

Awards