Business & Tech
North Park Lounge Owner Mark Baranowski Builds a Restaurant Empire
The Pine resident is one of the most prolific restaurateurs in the North Hills.
Mark Baranowski started his career by buying the original North Park Lounge at 8701 Babcock Boulevard in McCandless.
That was 23 years ago.
Today, in addition to the original, Baranowski also owns the in Cranberry, the Cabana Bar in Wexford, and , which opened in February at the Pine Tree Shoppes in Wexford.
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And he has a yet to be named restaurant at the site of the former Sunseri’s (and before that Jergel’s, which ) restaurant at 3385 Babcock Boulevard.
"We don't have a name for it yet, but it'll be food-wise a menu like North Park Lounge in McCandless, maybe not as many dinners, but it will have wings, subs, salads, and all the appetizers and sandwiches," he said. “We'll have a lot of TV's so it will be a good place to go to watch sporting events. Then at night it would probably be something similar to what Jergel's used to do, bands, a D-J or some form of entertainment.”
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Baranowski hopes to close on the property in the next month, and is planning extensive renovations before opening, possibly before the holidays in December.
When he bought his first restaurant, Baranowski admits he didn’t know much about the food service industry, but armed with an accounting degree from Duquesne University and an M.B.A. from West Virginia University, he was anxious to get started and follow in his family’s footsteps.
“Our family owned the , and my older brother bought ,” he said. “I was raised in an entrepreneurial family. So I knew I wanted to go into business, but I didn't know what I wanted to do. When North Park Lounge came available, my friend Greg Maggio, who had a restaurant background, partnered with me and we ended up doing that restaurant.”
Maggio and Baranowski remained partners for 11 years, buying 3 more restaurants before going their separate ways. Maggio died in 2005 of complications following surgery. He was 46.
Having grown up in a family business environment, Baranowski is hoping his two sons, Eddie and Brock, follow in his footsteps, “if they want,” he insists.
His oldest daughter, Jordan, already works for the company. “She graduated from the University of Akron and now works with my controller and human resources person,” he said.
The Baranowski family lives in Pine, where all three children excelled at sports.
“Jordan was on the soccer team the year won the state championship,” Baranowski said. “She played who is alternate for the U.S. women’s Olympic soccer team.”
Baranowski’s oldest son, Eddie, played basketball and football at Pine-Richland and now attends the University of Pittsburgh.
The youngest son, Brock, is a standout running back and defensive back going into . “We are not sure where he will end up in college, wherever football takes him,” said Baranowski. “He wants to be able to compete at the highest level possible.”
Should his sons decide to join their father in the family business, they will have plenty to keep them busy. Baranowski is teaming with real estate broker Herky Pollock to redevelop the former Blue Spruce motel on Route 22 in Murrysville.
“It's a big development, it is six acres, four different buildings,” he said. “There will be a day care center, a , a , plus a number of other retail shops. I’ll anchor the one corner with a North Park Lounge and a big outdoor area, and on the other corner there will be the restaurant, Burgatory.”
And if that isn't enough, Baranowski is also moving into Pittsburgh’s north shore in 2014, opening another North Park Lounge in a new development that has yet to break ground across from theJerome Bettis Grille 36 and next to Stage AE.
Baranowski credits his success to his staff. “My managers and my employees are really great,” he said. “We have so many good people, and people who have been with us for a long period of time. We take care of them, we have big Christmas parties, and we take our managers away on vacation and things like that. We just got a really, really good crew of people, it makes all of the difference in the world.”
As for the future, Baranowski has no plans to slow down. “I want to keep growing. I love what I do and it's a lot of fun,” he said. “As long as I'm having fun I'm going to keep doing it.”
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