Itโs hard to guess where our new, more sophisticated downtown cultural area will take us. First, honest-to-gosh class watering holes, boutiques and tea houses. Well, Renoโs first hookah lounge, Hookava, has started doing business down there at 395 W. First St. Itโs co-owned by Bryan McArdle. What could be next? An oxygen bar?
Whereโd the name, Hookava, come from? Is it tobacco and coffee?
No. Itโs just a name we came up with. We were going to serve this drink called kava, itโs a root tea. Itโs from Polynesia, and we were going to serve that and hookah, and we realized that we would rather serve beer and wine. We started leaning toward going toward the lounge style, but we kept the name. You take hookah, and you take kava, and you put them together, and youโve got hookava.
So I blew it with my guess of coffee.
We were originally going to open in the Mizpah Hotel, and we were about two months from opening when it burned down.
Wow.
That was going to be kind of a coffee shop feel to it, but now that we have a new location, weโre kind of doing a lounge/bar kind of feel.
But youโre off the road, right?
Weโre on the bottom floor of the Reno Riviera Motel. Thereโs like a lounge area thatโs kind of in its lobby, and weโre kind of off the beaten path. Our front entrance is actually in the alleyway between the Reno Riviera and the church on Arlington.
Thatโs what I was thinking.
Weโre squeezed right in there. If you look right through the church parking lot, you can see us. If you are standing at Se7en Teahouse, if you look right through there, you can see our neon signs.
What inspired you to open a hookah lounge?
My younger brother, Shawn, whoโs also an owner with me, he has been wanting to open up a club or do something for years. We were talking about it one night, and someone mentioned that Reno didnโt have a hookah lounge. We were both, โYouโre right. Reno does need a hookah lounge.โ
Do you do strictly flavored tobaccos or other things? I donโt know much about hookah-ing.
You take tobacco and a mix of honey and molasses and preservatives, and they call it โshisha,โ thatโs what they call the tobacco. We have 32 flavors. Weโre like Baskin-Robbins. We have flavors like pumpkin pie, peach, mocha, mint, piรฑa colada, strawberry, watermelon. Anything you can think of. You can create other flavors, like a banana pie or a creamcicle.
Youโre kidding. And the smoke tastes like that?
No kidding. It really does taste like what it is. We kind of prepare the hookah for you and bring it out to your table. It usually lasts around 45 minutes. It can be split with as many friends as you want. We do serve hummus and pita bread or chips and salsa, and we do have a selection of wine and beer.
And what are your hours?
Our hours are about 7 p.m.-midnight. And on weekends, we stay open until about 2 a.m. Friday and Saturday. Right now, weโre closed on Sunday.
What kind of people do you get?
Itโs mostly a college crowd. We have regulars. We have people who come in almost every night. Itโs crazy.
What else should we talk about with regard to hookahs?
Our Web site will soon be up, hookava.com. We also have a Myspace page.
