One of the most prominent riverfront areas in downtown Jacksonville has a new tenant lined up. Depending on who you ask, this could be an indication that the city is finally coming or that the residents are going to be priced out.
A Downtown Investment Authority evaluation committee has recommended that Atlas Restaurant Group, a Baltimore-based company with over 50 restaurants throughout the Mid-Atlantic, construct and run a seafood restaurant at Riverfront Plaza, the park that took the place of the former Jacksonville Landing site on the Northbank. The proposal was approved by the committee 3-0 in late April, and a few days later, the entire DIA board approved the negotiations. On paper, this type of vote appears to be standard. In actuality, it has evolved into a local Rorschach test.
A portion of the story is revealed by the numbers alone. Atlas wants the city to reimburse it for the $8 million it spent on the building’s design and construction. After that, it would invest an additional $4 million to complete the interior, which would include a rooftop bar to attract evening patrons, a full dining room with steak and seafood, and a raw bar and casual dining area on the waterfront.
With a clause that raises rent to 5% of revenue if the restaurant makes $11.2 million annually, base rent would begin at $560,000 and increase by 3% annually. That isn’t intended to be pocket change for a restaurant in a city park. The Annapolis menu, which starts at about $16 for appetizers, $20 for sandwiches, and $34 for fresh catches, has already become a talking point. Atlas proposed its Choptank brand, the seafood concept it operates in Annapolis, as the model for Jacksonville.
During the discussion, Jill Caffey, one of the three committee members who gave the proposal a score, stated as much. She praised Atlas’s performance history and described the plan as “a way to get it done and get it done right,” but she also pointed out the obvious: many diners in Jacksonville won’t pay $34 for a piece of fish at a public park. The committee staff gently pushed back, pointing out that the lower end of the market would likely be filled by other planned restaurants near Riverfront Plaza and the nearby St. Johns River Park. It’s unclear if that balances out; it’s the kind of assurance that seems plausible in a conference room but is put to the test as soon as the doors open.

This transaction also has a more subdued undertone that is unrelated to crab cakes. Atlas’s interest in this market is said to stem from Colin Tarbert, the CEO of DIA, who worked in Baltimore’s public development industry for more than 20 years before moving to Jacksonville. It’s a minor detail that’s easy to overlook in the press releases, but it reveals something about how these deals truly occur—not just through competitive scoring sheets, but also through relationships developed over years in a completely different city.
Prohibition Kitchen, a gastropub concept from St. Augustine-based PK Hospitality Group that offered live music, a rum-tasting room, and a far more accommodating rent structure, including two full years of rent abatement, was defeated by Atlas. On the committee’s evaluation, PK scored significantly lower than Atlas (71.7 to 90), but its pitch was arguably more Jacksonville-flavored, scrappier, and less polished—the kind of place locals might actually recognize themselves in.
None of this takes place in a vacuum. The second phase of Riverfront Plaza, which will include a beer garden, trails, bridge access, and swing chairs overlooking the water, is still being designed with public input sessions just coming to an end. The first phase of the park opened just six months ago. Later this year, work on that second phase is anticipated to begin. The restaurant will be a part of a downtown that is obviously attempting to revitalize its riverfront identity, and it will be situated within that broader transformation. It probably won’t be clear until the rooftop bar opens and Jacksonville sees the actual prices on a real menu whether Atlas’s seafood concept becomes a symbol of that revival or a reminder of who gets left out.
