A simple definition of a shared-use kitchen is a certified commercial kitchen in which individuals or businesses prepare value-added food products and meals, usually paying an hourly or daily rate to lease a space shared by others. These spaces are most often used by culinary or packaged food entrepreneurs and can have positive social, economic, and health impacts on a community. The term shared-use kitchen is sometimes used synonymously with commercial kitchen, certified kitchen, kitchen incubator / incubator kitchen, food business accelerator, commissary kitchen, community kitchen, etc. While a shared-use kitchen may be found in conjunction with these types of kitchens, they do not always mean the same thing. So to round out the definition of a shared-use kitchen, we will define these other terms as well.

shared-use kitchen noun : a certified commercial kitchen in which individuals or businesses prepare value-added food products and meals, usually paying an hourly or daily rate to lease a space shared by others

Commercial kitchens are not a new phenomena. Every restaurant, college or dining service and some elementary schools and churches will have a commercial kitchen that has industrial grade equipment to feed large numbers. Many communities are turning these facilities into shared-use kitchens that can be rented by the hour, or made available free of charge, to serve members of the community who need a larger kitchen for private events or for personal / hobby food production. This is sometimes called a community kitchen. Entrepreneurs who make products or meals as a business would use this type of commercial grade, certified kitchen space in order to sell food to the public, because it meets the regulatory requirements for venting, sanitation and food safety. This is particularly important for farmers who want to process and sell value-added items that bring additional income, or for food hubs to lightly process raw fruit and vegetables to be sold to schools and other institutions in the forms that they need.

Kitchen Incubators (= incubator kitchens = food business incubators) have been on the rise in the last decade, with 200 incubator kitchens reported in the U.S. in 2016 by Econsult Solutions, a 50% increase in just three years. As food entrepreneurship, start-up culture, buy local campaigns, and small batch processing have become intertwining trends in most U.S. cities, the need for processing and kitchen prep space has grown tremendously. Almost all kitchen incubators provide the space for entrepreneurs to producewhether in a shared-use kitchen rented by the hour or day, or in a private, dedicated space leased by the month or yearwhich can dramatically increase the number of food business startups because they do not need to make the large and risky upfront investment in facilities and equipment.

For these reasons and those cited above, we see municipalities increasingly investing in commercial kitchens and food business incubators. They can boost farmer incomes, make better food available in schools and hospitals, and spur economic growth.

What makes a kitchen incubator different from a shared-use kitchen is the wrap-around support services kitchen incubators provide. They help small food businesses with production, marketing, packaging, gaining distribution, etc. What makes a food business accelerator different from a food business incubator is twofold: the later stage of development of the food business, and that most accelerators do not provide production space (entrepreneurs may be producing in a shared-use kitchen, kitchen incubator or with a co-packer). Accelerator programs usually run for three to six months, help food businesses rapidly scale and sometimes assist in raising capital to do so.

To learn more about what makes incubator kitchens successful and the right mix of features needed for such a facility, check out this piece from the NVA archives on Kitchen Incubators: Is there a recipe for success? which outlines everything from pricing models to storage services to common pitfalls of operating an incubator kitchen.

OK we snuck in another term: co-packer. A co-packer, or contract manufacturer, is an independent party that operates a large commercial production facility to make food products for a large number of customers that are sold under the customers’ brand names. Smaller scale co-packing facilities are sometimes referred to as commissary kitchens, where production for a number of customers is centralized in one facility using a facility-managed crew. Commissary kitchens can also be operated by an individual company or organization that has multiple outlets. Some school districts have commissary kitchens where meals are prepped and then delivered and served at each school. Today, commissary kitchens are increasingly associated with food trucks. This is the common term used for the type of shared-use kitchen where food truck operators prep the meals they vend from their trucks.

NVA has also worked on dozens of projects that involve business planning for or the design of shared-use commercial and incubator kitchens; you can see some of them here. Plus, we have a great free tool for doing some quick capacity modeling for a planned kitchen incubator spacehead over to the NVA Toolsite to use our Kitchen Facility HubSizer® tool!

 Whatcom County Food System Plan

In 2021, the Whatcom County Food System Committee conducted a community food assessment that pointed to key opportunities to build a more robust and resilient regional food system. New Venture Advisors partnered with Whatcom County staff and the Food System Committee to draft a Whatcom County Food System Plan that builds upon these findings. This Plan focuses on five key goals for building a more equitable, sustainable, and resilient food system, and was informed by an inclusive community engagement process. The Food System Plan will provide the county with a policy roadmap that will strengthen the local food system for years to come. (2023)

 Whatcom Local Food Campus

The Whatcom Community Foundation invests in activities and organizations that improve the ability of people to help themselves, increase connections among people, and take cooperative approaches to community issues. WCF is exploring the development of a local food campus on a waterfront property that would become a multi-tenant site, anchored by a collaborative production kitchen benefitting food access, school system, and community organizations. The goal is strengthening Whatcom County’s local food system by promoting health equity, forging tangible strategic connections between food production organizations, and helping farmers connect with institutional markets. The facility will also feature an incubation kitchen, demonstration kitchen, event and classroom space, collaborative office and conference facilities, and housing.  New Venture Advisors developed the business case for this ambitious project and continues to support its development through engagement and operational development. (2023)