NYC'S 1st cat cafe finds kitties purrfect forever homes
Localish Localish
2.12M subscribers
931 views
30

 Published On Mar 26, 2023

In lower Manhattan's Chinatown, you'll find two businesses that exist in harmony, side by side: a small macaron bakery and new yorks first cat cafe down on 46 Hester Street.

"It's a great place to come when you're stressed. It's a great place to come when you're sad. It's a great place to come when you're happy," said Christina Ha, the Co-Founder of both Macaron Parlour and Meow Parlour.

Christina Ha founded Macaron Parlour in 2010 with her husband. About two years later, they opened their first storefront. One hot summer day, they found a cat on the way home from work. Her husband thought the cat was a black and white cat they had seen around the neighborhood, which they had named Mr. Socks due to his white paws. It was a summer full of heat waves, and they decided the cat needed to be inside to survive. But to Christina's surprise, the cat he found was a kitten, was grey and white, and looked nothing like the original Mr. Socks.

Not knowing anything about cats at the time and being allergic, Christina was not planning on taking in a cat, but they took him to the vet, and he got an $8 discount for being a good boy.

"I was like, 'oh my god, I'm his mother now.' And we kept the name Mr. Socks," Ha recalled.

Christina's Co-Founder of Meow Parlour, Emilie Legrand, was a pastry cook at Macaron Parlour at the time. As a fellow cat lover and parent, she was enthusiastically supportive and guided Christina through being a new cat owner.

During this time, France was about to open their first cat cafe, and Emilie, who was from France, wanted to go home and check it out.

"I just got so mad! How dare Paris be ahead of New York in terms of opening something like this!" Christina laughed, "So I told my husband, 'We have a cafe; I want to open cat cafe' and he was like 'That's a terrible idea.'"

Christina then wrote a thirteen-page business plan out of spite. She knew it wouldn't make them rich, but she calculated it would pay for itself, and they could help an endless number of cats. She even reached out to the New York Department of Health, and once she asked how separate the cats needed to be from the cafe, everyone stopped thinking this idea was crazy. The DOH's support and serious partnership with Emilie Legrand was the turning point that brought Meow Parlour to life.

"I was determined to be the first one," said Ha.

Initially, they handled sourcing and the adoption of the cats by partnering with another rescue group. But as time went on, it became more apparent that as the people caring for these cats during their adoption and meeting the adopters, they wanted to have more agency in the process. So in February 2018, Meow Parlour decided to set up its own non-profit to gain control of sourcing the cats and their care. Now, they source their cats from shelters or other rescues, and since Meow Parlour is a unique space, they can bring in a lot of cats. From the moment the cats come in, Meow Parlour takes responsibility for their medical care, feeding, well-being, etc. New cats are sent to foster homes first, then brought to Meow Parlour until they're ready for adoption. This decision to strike out as their own non-profit helped them more than double their adoption rate in the first year.

"And then we get to kind of track them beyond. Of all the things we've done, that's the thing I think we're the most proud of," said Ha.

Since the beginning, Christina and Emilie had also focused their time on nursing neonatal kittens until they were old enough for adoption. But this is the first year they are shifting focus to push for senior cat adoptions. About eleven months ago, Christina adopted a seventeen-year-old senior cat herself.

"He's the biggest joy in my life, and that's one of the reasons why we have senior cats in our space now...Someone took care of him for the first sixteen years of his life so that when I was ready, he was ready too," Ha tearfully explained.

One of Meow Parlour's objectives is to be a resource to the community, and over the years, they have helped to microchip and fix many local shop cats for free.

If you want to learn more about Meow Parlour's non-profit, how to adopt, or book a reservation to visit, you can go to their website: https://www.meowparlour.com/. For $16 a person, you'll get an hour-long session where you can hang out and meet all the cats and order some delicious macarons from the cafe next door.

"It's a magical place. It is not the same any time you come in, it's always different, but each time is an experience within itself," Ha described.

Check us out on:
Website - www.localish.com
Facebook -   / localish  
Instagram -   / localish  
Twitter -   / localish  

Localish is all about bringing out the good in America’s cities. Our locally-sourced stories transcend city limits so you can live like a local wherever you go.

#Localish #GoodPeople #GoodNews

show more

Share/Embed