Tacos Tequila Whiskey spinoff poised to close in Cap Hill

Tacos Tequila scaled

Taco Bar replaced Tacos Tequila Whiskey’s sit-down taqueria in Cap Hill in August. (Photos courtesy of Tacos Tequila Whiskey)

The restaurant formerly known as Tacos Tequila Whiskey may pour its last drop in Cap Hill this month.

Owner Kevin Morrison told BusinessDen last week that the restaurant’s 10-year lease at 215 E. 7th Ave. and its equipment went up for sale last month, and a deal with a potential buyer could close toward the end of January.

Tacos Kevin Morrison at City Park

Restaurateur Kevin Morrison rebranded his Tacos Tequila Whiskey in Cap Hill during the pandemic.

If it does, the 1,500-square-foot restaurant in the Governor’s Park sub-neighborhood would close around that time, he said.

Tacos Tequila Whiskey opened at the site in March 2018, following locations in City Park (2012) and West Highland (2013).

In August, with the pandemic pushing people to takeout and delivery, Morrison tweaked the restaurant’s model and rebranded it as a fast-casual concept called Taco Bar.

Taco Bar serves 11 different tacos, some of which were offered at TTW — like al pastor and the beer-battered “Fish N Beer” tacos — and some of which weren’t, such as pastrami-cured and smoked beef tongue tacos.

Morrison still likes the Taco Bar concept, but he’s decided it needs a different location.

“It doesn’t have the exact layout we need for what we envisioned and would cost too much money to get what we wanted,” Morrison said. “So we just decided to look for something that fits our needs to see if this concept is worth developing past one or two stores.”

Taco Bar is set up for takeout and delivery, but also has room for dining at the bar.

“I was an original founder of Spicy Pickle, and when I left I was out of fast-casual for a while, and I really enjoyed it,” Morrison said. “But looking at the different segments, I thought we’d have a good opportunity to jump into fast-casual with less labor. We want to do something with a full-service feel with a bar, but in a fast-casual segment because it will open more growth opportunities down the road instead of just having a sit-down taqueria.”

Morrison said he does not have a new location solidified for Taco Bar.

Morrison’s KTM Restaurant Group also owns Fish N Beer, a seafood restaurant that opened in 2016 at 3510 Larimer St. in RiNo.

Just down the street from Taco Bar, Aloy Thai is preparing to open.

Tacos Tequila scaled

Taco Bar replaced Tacos Tequila Whiskey’s sit-down taqueria in Cap Hill in August. (Photos courtesy of Tacos Tequila Whiskey)

The restaurant formerly known as Tacos Tequila Whiskey may pour its last drop in Cap Hill this month.

Owner Kevin Morrison told BusinessDen last week that the restaurant’s 10-year lease at 215 E. 7th Ave. and its equipment went up for sale last month, and a deal with a potential buyer could close toward the end of January.

Tacos Kevin Morrison at City Park

Restaurateur Kevin Morrison rebranded his Tacos Tequila Whiskey in Cap Hill during the pandemic.

If it does, the 1,500-square-foot restaurant in the Governor’s Park sub-neighborhood would close around that time, he said.

Tacos Tequila Whiskey opened at the site in March 2018, following locations in City Park (2012) and West Highland (2013).

In August, with the pandemic pushing people to takeout and delivery, Morrison tweaked the restaurant’s model and rebranded it as a fast-casual concept called Taco Bar.

Taco Bar serves 11 different tacos, some of which were offered at TTW — like al pastor and the beer-battered “Fish N Beer” tacos — and some of which weren’t, such as pastrami-cured and smoked beef tongue tacos.

Morrison still likes the Taco Bar concept, but he’s decided it needs a different location.

“It doesn’t have the exact layout we need for what we envisioned and would cost too much money to get what we wanted,” Morrison said. “So we just decided to look for something that fits our needs to see if this concept is worth developing past one or two stores.”

Taco Bar is set up for takeout and delivery, but also has room for dining at the bar.

“I was an original founder of Spicy Pickle, and when I left I was out of fast-casual for a while, and I really enjoyed it,” Morrison said. “But looking at the different segments, I thought we’d have a good opportunity to jump into fast-casual with less labor. We want to do something with a full-service feel with a bar, but in a fast-casual segment because it will open more growth opportunities down the road instead of just having a sit-down taqueria.”

Morrison said he does not have a new location solidified for Taco Bar.

Morrison’s KTM Restaurant Group also owns Fish N Beer, a seafood restaurant that opened in 2016 at 3510 Larimer St. in RiNo.

Just down the street from Taco Bar, Aloy Thai is preparing to open.

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