Harlem’s Only Bowling Alley Closing This Week

Harlem Lanes, a bowling alley that opened with the help of former President Bill Clinton’s foundation, announced it will be closing at the end of the week.

“(U)nfortunately we are closing our doors to the lanes. We will be selling memorabilia to the public,” according to the company’s Twitter post late Monday night.

General manager Calvin Mumford said increasing rents for the space on Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard and 126th Street and the slow summer season contributed to the closure of the lanes that rely mainly on kids’ parties and camps this time of year.

“They’ve put their blood sweat and tears into this. We’ve done everything we can,” Mumford said to DNAinfo about co-owner Sharon Joseph, who could not be reached for comment.

The bowling alley employed 40 people on a full-time and part-time basis, according to Mumford.

“She’s a person with a very large heart,” he said of Joseph. “She cringes at the thought of having to lay people off.”

The 24-lane bowling alley opened in 2006 with Joseph’s aunt and business partner Gail Richards as a project of the William J. Clinton Foundation Urban Enterprise Initiative — with the former president attending the ribbon-cutting.

When it opened, Harlem Lanes was the only bowling alley in the country owned by black women and was Harlem’s first bowling alley in three decades. The establishment served food and was a popular gathering place for parties and lounging.

“These two women put in a tremendous amount of hard work and will serve as a model for small businesses that want to have a role in reshaping their communities,” Clinton said at the time. “We remain committed to supporting economic growth in urban communities by encouraging aspiring entrepreneurs to turn their dreams into reality.”

Mumford said the establishment remained busy and that people still were stopping by to book parties — but it wasn’t enough to keep the business going.

“I’m sad because I know what she’s put in this place, the years of sacrifice,” Mumford said Joseph.

On the heels of the Hueman Books closing, why do you think Harlem lanes closed?

 

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6 Responses to Harlem’s Only Bowling Alley Closing This Week

  1. Imminent domain, like the alley in the Newark NJ area. ” We’re claiming and taking control of this space.”

  2. It was too unruly. While there one night, I saw NYPD officers searching for something, only to find out later management and NYPD had prevented anyone from entering or leaving secondary to a police investigation. Management did not notify patrons of any possible danger. Also, for those kid parties they depended on, parents were not minding their children. Instead, the children were running across lanes more than bowling and nearly got in. the way of the bowling balls of the patrons who were actually bowling.

  3. Pingback: With Retail Rents Doubling, Small Businesses Are Closing in Harlem |

  4. Michael Taylor

    I believe that many people of color just would not patronize their own. They would rather go to and support venues owned by other races for a sense of social endowment instead of partaking in Black empowerment. Or it could be just another symbol of the economic slow down.

  5. Michael,

    Maybe some but not all.
    HW

  6. Pingback: Eyes on the Street: Safety Upgrades Come to Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Blvd. |

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