Panera Bread, which opened on Burlington’s Church Street in September 2011, will close Monday, manager Alex Haller confirmed. A sign on the front door announces the closure.
“We were told last night,” Haller said Friday afternoon, adding that the 20 or so employees of the downtown restaurant were offered jobs at the two other Paneras in the area.
Haller has worked at Panera since it opened on the Church Street Marketplace, and said he is sad the restaurant will close. “I love it down here,” he said. “But my job is secure.”
The space will be taken over by Outdoor Gear Exchange, according to a news release from the locally owned camping, recreation and clothing store.
“We are grateful to the community support we’ve had for the more than 23 years we’ve been in business in Burlington,” said Marc Sherman, co-owner of OGE, in the Friday morning release.
Outdoor Gear Exchange opened on Main Street in 1995 and made two more downtown moves before settling into its current quarters in 2011. Its expansion to the neighboring space — which will add 4,400 square feet to the store — is expected to be complete in the spring, according to Sherman.
“We’re excited for this opportunity, and very thankful for the way the community has supported us for more than two decades,” Sherman told Seven Days Friday afternoon.
The additional space will double OGE’s window frontage on Church Street, he noted. There will be more room for warehousing, web operations, and “off-season clearance products,” Sherman said.
OGE’s expansion comes at a time when branches of national chains are closing downtown. Panera’s is the third chain to announce in the past month the closure of its Church Street Marketplace location. Macy’s will close in March and Bruegger’s Bagels closed in mid-December.
“I think what it says is that Burlington supports local businesses more than it supports national chains,” Sherman said. “And that national chains, while they have an important place in our marketplace and downtown, do not have as much of an investment in the community as local stores do.
“As a result,” he continued, ” local stores are able to take risks and weather economic ups and downs in a way that national chains can’t.”




It’s great to support local stores, unless they sell poorly-made stuff made in third world countries for pennies on the dollar…
Hey Seven Days,
The store didnt open in 2016-may need to make an edit!
Thanks for letting us know about the date. Panera opened on Church Street in September 2011.
Hopefully the local stores that are going to step in to replace these chains will provide the same quality, service, selection, and price, but that’s probably wishful thinking.
Never like to hear of people losing their jobs (I rarely ate there but when I did staff was friendly). Thankfully there are several more great *local* options for breakfast/lunch in downtown Burlington.
I wonder if OGE would consider using a portion of the space for a little sustainably run Cafe. Seems like a great fit.
It’s a shame that Panera left. It was a convenient and less expensive lunch option for those of us who work downtown. As for OGE, I do not see a need for them to expand. We have LL Bean, which has better quality and they stand behind their products. I once bought something at OGE and when it broke 4 days later and I tried to return it I was told that I could not. They do not stand behind their products. As far as I’m concerned I would rather have Panera back.