Espresso Vivace

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Espresso Vivace
FoundedSeattle, Washington, United States (1988 (1988))
FoundersDavid C. Schomer and Geneva Sullivan
Headquarters
Number of locations
3[1]
Number of employees
~30 (2016)
Websiteespressovivace.com
Latte art created at Espresso Vivace

Espresso Vivace is a

coffee shop and roaster known for its coffee and roasting practices. Vivace's owner, David Schomer
, [2][3] is credited with developing and popularizing latte art in the United States.[4]

David Schomer

Espresso Vivace was founded in 1988 by former Boeing engineer David C. Schomer and Digital Equipment Corporation mainframe technician Geneva Sullivan, who were married at that time.[4][5] Espresso Vivaces's first incarnation was a coffee cart at 5th and Union, serving mainly financial industry workers, whom Schomer says did not consistently frequent the same cafes or pay close attention to quality.[6]

Schomer and Sullivan opened a second street-facing, covered stand near the Broadway Market

Seattle Central Community College customers "didn't know any better" without other nearby coffee shops operating on the same gourmet level.[6] To make way for the Capitol Hill light rail station they were forced to move, choosing a new location five blocks north, near "high-end housing." Here Espresso Vivace found customers who Schomer said were more able to appreciate gourmet coffee as an art form, and who generally became "rabidly loyal" to their favorite haunts.[7] Sullivan and Schomer's business partnership continued after their divorce in 2008.[4][8]

References

  1. ^ "Locations". Espresso Vivace. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  2. ^ Romano, Tricia (October 22, 2015), "Vivace's David Schomer — not Starbucks — 'made coffee huge in Seattle'", The Seattle Times
  3. ^ Allison, Melissa. Vivace founder, David Schomer is a coffee prophet. Seattle Times. Sunday, July 2, 2006
  4. ^ a b c Bonné, Jon (May 9, 2003). "Meet espresso's exacting master — Food Inc". NBC News, MSNBC.
  5. ^ Geiger, Grace (December 31, 2009), "Seattle Coffee Guide: The Personalities; The people behind Seattle's coffee culture", Seattle Magazine, archived from the original on October 30, 2013
  6. ^
  7. ^ Murakami, Kery (May 16, 2006), "Whirr of Espresso Vivace soon silenced by new rail; Capitol Hill coffee shop will give way to Sound Transit", Seattle Post-Intelligencer
  8. ^ Washington State Divorce Indexes, 1969-2014, Olympia, Washington: Washington State Archives

External links