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Santa Cruz’s Abbott Square Market

This market is stocked with a flavor for every mood.

crowd of people gathering and dining at Abbott Square Market in Santa Cruz, photo
Opened in 2017, Abbot Square Market has become a popular destination in downtown Santa Cruz.
Courtesy Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History

The bustling downtown district of Santa Cruz, California, has long been teeming with good eats, drinks, and shopping, as well as its fair share of buskers and characters. But the amorphous urban neighborhood lacked a clear center—until 2017, when the redwood-lined surf town unveiled Abbott Square Market, a lively public plaza and gastro-hub in the heart of downtown. Nestled beneath the Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History (MAH), the industrial-chic indoor market is stocked with a flavor for every mood, spread between four artisanal eateries, a coffee shop/bakery, and a couple of hip bars.

At Pizzeria la Bufala, Southern Italy–born chef Sandro Costanza dishes up traditional Neapolitan-style pizzas alongside a delectable mozzarella bar, where your choice of fresh cheeses, salami, or olives comes with arugula, cherry tomatoes, and pizza bread—the perfect, sharable companion to afternoon drinks on the patio.

One stall down, Veg on the Edge’s fried potato balls have quickly became a local favorite. The crispy, savory delights of red potatoes, chickpea flour, onions, and brown mustard seeds pair well with anything from the West African–inspired vegan menu. Rounding out the market’s fare is Cat Cloud Companion, a mash-up of local gourmet coffee roasters Cat & Cloud and the artisanal bakery Companion Bakeshop.

But the highlights of the culinary bazaar are surely the two bars, collectively called Front & Cooper, that bookend the open-floor plan. One focuses on craft cocktails, while the other serves up beer and wine with some tasty surprises thrown in, like sherry on draught. Both were the brainchild of world-champion bartender and restaurateur Kate Gerwin, who also manages the market. Gerwin is playful with her menus—the inaugural iteration had the theme of The Lost Boys, the cult vampire movie filmed in Santa Cruz 30 years ago—but goes to painstaking lengths for quality, requiring that everything from sours and syrups to tonic and cola is made fresh in house. The mixology whiz regularly reinvents the menu, utilizing the wealth of local history housed in the museum upstairs to dream up Santa Cruz–inspired drinks.

Guests looking to sip or nosh outside can choose between a lush, tranquil, and hidden nook dubbed The Secret Garden or the square, where the museum’s formerly underused outdoor courtyard has been transformed into an attractive gathering place. Art was built into the plaza’s design, from the bright patchwork mural by Thomas Campbell that envelops the exterior to the gleaming red buoys dangling from above. It’s also ingrained in its culture: The MAH’s participatory spirit spills out into the square, where patrons may come across live music, events, and art-making “crafternoons.”

The buzzy marketplace was the realization of MAH Executive Director Nina Simon’s long-term vision for converting the museum into downtown’s fashionable nucleus.

When to Go

Any day of the week is a great time to pop into the market and rub elbows with locals over happy hour cocktails or people-watch from the courtyard. But take note of these events if you’re looking for an even livelier time to visit.

Evenings on the first Friday of every month are a special occasion in many art galleries and event spaces across town, including the MAH and Abbott Square, which join forces for First Friday art celebrations. Expect live music, art exhibits, and free admission to the MAH.

Día de Los Muertos, the Mexican holiday honoring the dead, is celebrated throughout downtown Santa Cruz, complete with dancing, face painting, food and drink, outdoor altars, and a procession from the MAH to nearby Evergreen Cemetery.

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