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Beloved NYC dog cafe Boris and Horton is closing

Beloved NYC dog cafe Boris and Horton is closing

New York City dogs and their owners are about to be uprooted from a regular doggie date spot.

Boris & Horton, New York City’s beloved dog cafe, announced on Thursday morning that it will be closing both the East Village and Williamsburg locations on Monday, February 26.

Within an hour of posting the sad news on Instagram, over 500 comments rolled in, voicing support, disbelief, disappointment and confusion over the seemingly sudden loss of community space. 

Boris & Horton first opened on Avenue A in 2018. The unique space offered off-leash exercise and socialization for local pups, plus coffee, snacks and WiFi for their humans. This past summer, the concept expanded to Williamsburg, with an extensive dog-friendly space for daytime playdates and popular evening activities like dog-friendly comedy, drag, music and art nights, plus weekend meetups, exercise classes and more.

Boris & Horton’s reason for closure is far too familiar for independent businesses in New York City: It’s just too expensive. 

“While we’re busy a lot of the time, there’s a lot of times where we’re just too slow,” Boris & Horton’s co-owner Logan Mikhly told Time Out New York via phone. “Our average ticket doesn’t meet our needs.” Rent, staffing and the cost of ingredients and materials are high, and increasing.

Mikhly added that due to being a dog-friendly business, Boris & Horton was subject to more DOH regulations than a typical coffee shop, required more square footage for safe and fun off-leash experiences, and had higher overhead by using exclusively disposable cups and plates, for health reasons.  

Boris & Horton
Melissa Kravitz HoeffnerA Hanukkah dog cookie at Boris & Horton

Still, this isn’t the end of Boris & Horton. The website and social media pages will remain active for future projects, and Mikhly plans to stay in the “dog world” for her next venture. She’s proud of the hundreds of animal rescue events the business hosted, the thousands of dogs they found homes for, and fundraising accomplished for local rescues. 

“We created a place that people could feel comfortable, and stop in if they needed a smile,” Mikhly said. Over the years, Boris & Horton was a space for proposals, weddings, post-breakup pet seshes, de-stressing and just creating a third place with top-tier vibes outside of home or work for countless New Yorkers. 

Right now, Mikhly is focused on supporting the staff. Fans of the cafes can still visit through Monday, February 26, buy merch and cafe items and perhaps contribute to a potential staff fundraiser. 

* This article was originally published here