When your name is already in lights on a marquee over a 1930s Art Deco masterpiece of a venue in downtown Minneapolis, what can you possibly do next?
"Keep going," said David Fhima, the restaurateur whose incandescent surname graces a shimmering copper wall above his theater district restaurant Fhima's Minneapolis, where he serves French-Moroccan food among the mint green-mirrored splendor of another era.
"It's a disease," he said, half-joking, about his drive to keep scaling up after almost 30 years of operating restaurants in the Twin Cities. "It's a question I don't have an answer to. I love what I do. I love people. I love cooking. I love making people feel special. And we are about substance over style."
Style is not lacking. Two years ago, the Fhima family acquired the former home of Ribnick Furs in the North Loop. The historic space has required painstaking feats of preservation to turn it into Maison Margaux, a grand new multilevel restaurant. When it opens May 12, the French Mediterranean-inspired bistro will join Fhima's Minneapolis in a portfolio that's as ostentatiously big-thinking as Fhima himself.
The sprawling complex has a half-dozen dining rooms, including a large private event space and a basement bar that you need a code to access (it's easy — just ask for it). Divisions between rooms are partly the result of restrictions over historic walls that couldn't be moved, and partly to create a homey feel, he said.
There are connective threads, but each area has its own character, and each required its own tiles, light fixtures, tabletops, Cambria counters and murals and paintings by local artists. Here, a column of mirrors. There, a curved, golden ceiling aglow with hundreds of clear light bulbs. Monkeys on the wallpaper in one room and red ginkgo leaves in another; wicker-style cafe chairs on the main level and velvet banquettes below; concrete floors covered in mismatched Moroccan rugs and wood floors with boards sourced from Arkansas. There's a single table on the roof. And if there's not enough tile inside, even the patio floor is being painted to look like tile.
Fhima had a hand in selecting all of it. (Greiner Construction of Minneapolis is overseeing the renovation.)
"It's probably going to be the most luxurious restaurant feel that is the most welcoming," he said, giving the Star Tribune a sneak peek of the space. "That's the name Maison. It's your house. Margaux means pearl. We think during COVID, we found a pearl."