flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

Mobile ordering is a centerpiece of Burger King’s new design

Coronavirus

Mobile ordering is a centerpiece of Burger King’s new design

Its reimagined restaurants are 60% smaller, with several pickup options.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | September 10, 2020

Drive-thru ordering and pickup are just one of the options that Burger King will offer in new designed stores that the fast-food giant will start building next year. Images: Restaurant Brands International

Next year, Restaurant Brands International (RBI) will begin to roll out new designs for its Burger King chain that are only two fifths the physical footprint of its traditional fast-food restaurant (which range from 3,000 to 4,000 sf on one-half to 1.5 acres), and are meant to provide customers with different ways food can be ordered and delivered.

The first new designed restaurants will be built in Miami (Restaurant Brands’ headquarters city), Latin America, and the Caribbean islands. Restaurant Brands did not disclose when the new designs would be extended to other cities in the U.S. Burger King has 18,756 locations in more than 100 countries, nearly all of which are independently owned franchises.

Also see: Burger King’s Restaurant of Tomorrow video.

 

NEW MEANING TO ‘HAVE IT YOUR WAY’

A mobile pickup area allows guests to use their smartphones to place orders and alert the store's staff when they've arrived.

 

In a prepared statement released last week, Restaurant Brands said that its new store blueprint would emphasize six elements:

•A double or triple drive-thru with digital menu boards and advertising. An external walk-up window on a glass façade is an alternative ordering point.

•Guests can park their cars in a drive-in area under a solar-paneled canopy, place orders by using the BK App or scanning a QR code, and have their food delivered to the vehicles.

•Customers can use a mobile app to place advance orders, for which the stores have dedicated parking slots for curbside delivery. The app also notifies employees when the customer arrives.

•Mobile and delivery orders can also be picked up from coded food lockers positioned at the store’s exterior. The food will be delivered straight from the kitchen.

•The restaurants will continue to offer on-premises dining. But one design option replaces the indoor dining room with a shaded patio and outdoor seating.

•One design features a kitchen and dining area that’s suspended above the drive-thru lanes, another gesture toward reducing the store’s footprint. Drive-thru guests would have their orders delivered from the kitchen via conveyor belt, with each lane having its own pickup spot. There is also an indoor seating area, designed for an almost 100% touchless experience.

 

In one of its new designs, a kitchen and dining area are suspended above drive-thru lanes. Food is delivered via conveyor belt from the kitchen to the pickup window.

 

PANDEMIC DRIVES DESIGN CHANGES

Restaurant Brands’ in-house design and technology teams came up with the new concept that “took into consideration how consumer behaviors are changing and [how] our guests will interact with our restaurants,” said Josh Kobza, the company’s COO.

Burger King accounts for about 70% of Restaurant Brands’ outlets. (Its other brands are Popeye’s and Tim Horton’s.) During the three months ended June 30, Burger King’s system-wide revenue, $4.127 billion, was down 25.5%.

Burger King is one of several fast-food chains—including Starbucks, Taco Bell, and Shake Shack—that are responding with new designs to changing guest patterns as a result of the coronavirus pandemic. The research firm NPD Group estimates that visits to drive-thrus jumped by 26% in April, May, and June. 

 

Burger King will still offer on-premises dining, both indoor and now outdoor.

Related Stories

Coronavirus | Apr 4, 2020

COVID-19: Construction completed on first phase of Chicago's McCormick Place into Alternate Care Facility

Walsh Construction, one of the largest contractors in the city of Chicago and in the United States, is leading the temporary conversion of a portion of the McCormick Place Convention Center into an Alternate Care Facility (ACF) for novel coronavirus patients. Construction on the first 500 beds was completed on April 3. 

Coronavirus | Apr 4, 2020

COVID-19: Architecture firms churn out protective face shields using their 3D printers

Architecture firms from coast to coast have suddenly turned into manufacturing centers for the production of protective face shields and face masks for use by healthcare workers fighting the COVID-10 pandemic.

Coronavirus | Apr 3, 2020

Cities will survive the pandemic

Density may make it easier for the virus to spread, but let’s not forget that cities are in many ways the heart of society, and a springboard of big ideas, inventions, art, and culture.

Coronavirus | Apr 3, 2020

Kogniz Health launches AI-based fever detection cameras for crowds to help limit coronavirus spread

System continuously scans crowds for fever as they enter facilities to locate and isolate risks.

Coronavirus | Apr 3, 2020

27% of construction firms report layoffs amid COVID-19 outbreak, says AGC

The fast-worsening COVID-19 pandemic has triggered layoffs at more than a quarter of construction firms responding to an online survey released today by the Associated General Contractors of America. The finding, based on responses from earlier this week, contrasts with the government’s monthly employment report for March, which found that construction employment declined by 29,000 as of mid-March.

Coronavirus | Apr 3, 2020

Test facility in a box: Modular, walk-in booth design for coronavirus testing

To address the need for testing in urban areas for those without vehicles, CannonDesign architect Albert Rhee created a walk-in testing booth that is slated for public use.

Coronavirus | Apr 3, 2020

Survey of U.S. code officials shows trends in code compliance during COVID-19

The results of the survey tell us how jurisdictions throughout the U.S. are keeping up with inspections, new building permits and new construction.

Coronavirus | Apr 3, 2020

CallisonRTKL buoyed by overseas demand

Customer service across the globe remains No. 1 priority, says new CFO.

Coronavirus | Apr 2, 2020

COVID-19: HMC Architects using 3D Printers to make face shields for healthcare workers

HMC staff is producing 3D-printed parts from their homes as they self-isolate.

Coronavirus | Apr 2, 2020

COVID-19: CannonDesign initiates industry coalition to make masks for healthcare providers

Coalition formed to make DIY face masks for healthcare workers in COVID-19 settings.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021