image description
Lisa Ake and Nik Rhodes co-owners with Josh and Emily Irwin in the reopened The Well Restaurant in Great Barrington.

The Well Restaurant & Bar has New Owners

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

The Well's smashburger, a popular menu item. 

GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — The Well Restaurant and Bar recently reopened under new management.

Four friends who have worked together previously decided to buy Main Street eatery a month ago to keep open a local hotspot.

"We all knew we all worked together. And this came up, and we just knew it was meant for us to take over, and we knew we could do a great job of it. We knew we could just keep it the neighborhood place," said co-owner Lisa Ake.

Ake, Nik Rhodes, and Josh and Emily Irwin bought the business together. They did some minor changes to the space but will keep a lot of the look along with some staple dishes. 

"The Well has always been known as kind of the neighborhood watering hole, the place where the locals maybe can come in and get a really good burger, some nachos, really good classic American pub food, you know," Ake said. "So that's kind of what I think this place has been known for this whole time, and we're continuing that by keeping the staples on the menu."

The Well opened in the late aughts and changed hands last year. When it was put up for sale again this past spring, the foursome jumped on the opportunity to purchase because they didn't want the town to lose another good place for the community to enjoy.

"Looking around, there's so much change happening, happening right now in Great Barrington, with businesses like Baba Louie's is gone now, which was a huge loss to the community. It was so sad. And there's other businesses that there are empty places now on Railroad Street, which is insane to me," Ake said. "We just had write-ups in Vogue about how cute this town is, and we just thought it would be a travesty to lose another place."

Ake says all four co-owners plan to be a big part of the restaurant's operation, and not just oversee from afar.

"We are not just owners. We are here all the time. Every dish that goes out [Josh Rhodes] touches. Like we care about the food, we care about what we're doing, service, food, everything," she said.

Rhodes is the chef at The Well and said he wants the food to have good taste at a good price.

"We are operating as a from-scratch kitchen. But that does not mean that we're gonna inflate the pricing," he said. "We want the food to have quality but maintain its approachability, both pricewise, but also flavorwise."

Ake said some of the favorites on their menu are the pork schnitzel and the "Not your IKEA meatballs," which is a Rhodes family recipe.

The Well also offers salads, soups, burgers and bar snacks and entrees likes steak frites, fish and chips, a mushroom pasta and macaroni and cheese with toppings.

The Well is currently open from 4 to 10 p.m. Wednesday through Friday, with the bar open later on Fridays, noon to 10 on Saturday with bar open later, and noon to 9 on Sunday. The owners hope to expand their hours in the coming weeks. 

Their menu and contact information can be found on their Facebook page


Tags: new owner,   restaurants,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Lee Breaks Ground on Public Safety Building

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Lee Town Administrator Chris Brittain says the community voted to invest in its future by approving the new $37 million complex. 

LEE, Mass. — Ground was ceremonially broken on the town's new public safety building, something officials see as a gift to the community and future generations. 

When finished, Lee will have a 37,000 square-foot combined public safety facility on Railroad Street where the Airoldi and Department of Public Works buildings once stood. Construction will cost around $24 million, and is planned to be completed in August 2027.

"This is the town of Lee being proactive. This is the town of Lee being thoughtful and considerate and practical and assertive, and this project is not just for us. This project is a gift," Select Board member Bob Jones said. 

"This is a gift to our children, our grandchildren."

State and local officials, including U.S. Rep. Richard Neal, gathered at the site on Friday, clad in hard hats and yellow vests, and shoveled some dirt to kick off the build. 

Town Administrator Chris Brittain explained that officials have planned and reviewed the need for a modern facility for the public safety departments for years, and that the project marks a new chapter, replacing 19th-century infrastructure with a "state-of-the-art" complex.

"The project is not just about concrete and steel, it's a commitment to the safety of our families, the efficiency of our first responders, and the future of our community," he said. 

He said he was grateful to the town's Police, Fire, and Building departments for their dedication while operating out of outdated facilities, and to the Department of Public Works, for coordinating site preparation and relocating its services. 

View Full Story

More South Berkshire Stories