Tuesday, March 10, 2026

From Summerhill to Yorkville: nutbar’s Strategic Toronto Expansion Continues

Founder Kate Taylor Martin's organic café chain opens fifth location in Midtown, with former Sorry Coffee space in Yorkville slated for spring debut

The story of Toronto’s fastest-growing superfood café chain begins with a cash register and a dream. “When I was 10, I asked my mom for a cash register for my birthday,” nutbar founder Kate Taylor Martin recalls, her enthusiasm evident even through a video call. “Back in the 90s, a cash register wasn’t an iPad – it was this huge clunky metal thing. My mom had to look through the yellow pages to find one.”

Kate Taylor Martin

That early retail passion has evolved into something remarkable. With their fifth location newly opened in Midtown and construction beginning at the former Sorry Coffee space in Yorkville, nutbar is challenging traditional notions of what a modern café can be. The expansion represents a deliberate move against current industry trends, emphasizing physical spaces and human connection in an increasingly digital market.

Future nutbar Yorkville at 102 Bloor St W (Image: 6ix Retail)

The path to creating Toronto’s premier superfood destination wasn’t obvious. Taylor Martin’s journey began at St. Michael’s Hospital, where working in PR opened her eyes to gaps in the healthcare system. “I felt this incredible calling to learn more about how to take accountability for my own health,” she explains. This led her to the Institute for Holistic Nutrition, where something clicked. “That same feeling that I had with the cash register – I went into that school and something just felt like it was lit up inside of me.”

During her studies, Taylor Martin began developing the superfood-based recipes that would eventually form nutbar’s foundation. “I would take these superfoods that I learned about in school and go home and try to make healthy snacks,” she explains. “I would give them to friends and family and people were like, ‘this is delicious, but where am I supposed to get this on the go?'” That question became the catalyst for nutbar’s first location in Summerhill in 2016.

nutbar Midtown at 2592 Yonge St (Image: 6ix Retail)
nutbar Midtown at 2592 Yonge St (Image: nutbar)

Today, each nutbar location tells its own story. The recently opened Midtown store features bistro tile floors, antique mirrors, and linen sconces. “I wanted it to feel like a really light filled, beautiful community neighborhood coffee shop,” Taylor Martin explains. The upcoming Yorkville location will adapt to its upscale surroundings while maintaining the brand’s signature warmth through natural materials.

The growth extends beyond cafés. nutbar recently acquired a manufacturing facility in North York, where they produce over 4,000 litres monthly of their signature “barmilk” product. With 30% organic nut content – far exceeding industry standards – the $22 premium product represents the brand’s expansion into retail.

What sets nutbar apart is their contrarian approach to modern food retail. While competitors race toward automation and digital ordering, Taylor Martin is betting on human connection. “In this hyper-digitalized, AI-automated world, the coffee shop of the future is actually going back,” she asserts. “More than ever, humans are desperate for face-to-face connection of a barista who smiles at them and remembers their order.”

This philosophy has created deep community bonds. “We just opened Midtown and I was standing there talking to every customer who walked in,” Taylor Martin shares, her voice brightening. “I had many people crying or tearing up saying, ‘You have no idea what nutbar means to me.’ Your Summerhill team got me through the hardest time in my life. Your Leslieville team held me when my dog died.”

nutbar Summerhill at 1240 Yonge St (Image: 6ix Retail)

Looking ahead, Taylor Martin sees potential beyond Toronto, with Vancouver’s health-conscious market presenting an attractive opportunity. She’s also watching her brother’s success with Othership in New York as a possible pathway for international growth. The brand’s real estate strategy is being handled by Ali Baker and Caitlyn Micuda at commercial real estate firm Avison Young.

“I’ve never wanted to grow just for the sake of growing,” she emphasizes. “I’m really lucky. I’m a sole founder. I can make decisions when I want. That’s been part of the success – it hasn’t just been about the bottom line. I have been very conscious about slow and steady growth to make sure that we have deep roots.”

The Yorkville location is scheduled to open in April 2025, bringing nutbar’s vision of community-focused, health-conscious cafés to another premium Toronto neighborhood. For Taylor Martin, it’s another step in a journey that began with a child’s fascination with a cash register and has grown into a mission to change how Torontonians think about healthy food and community connection.

Future nutbar Yorkville at 102 Bloor St W (Image: 6ix Retail)

More from 6ix Retail

Wayfair Brings Its Loyalty Program to Canada — And It’s the First Market Outside the U.S. to Get It

Wayfair Rewards launches in Canada with 5% back, free shipping, and member-only sales at $39 CAD per year

What’s Really Happening in Retail and Real Estate Hiring Right Now 

Foresight Recruitment Group's Shawna Brothers gives an honest read on Canada's real estate and retail hiring market in 2026 — the split, the pressure, and where things are heading. 

7,700 Units and Counting: Inside the Jarvis-Queen East Development Boom

The $27 billion transit investment catalysing Toronto's most dramatic neighbourhood transformation

The Changing Role of the Bank Branch — and What Toronto’s Closures Are Really Telling Us

Branches are going dark across the downtown core. Jean-Pierre Lacroix, one of the world's leading authorities on bank branch design, says the industry isn't retreating — it's being forced to finally become what customers have always needed it to be.

Bready Café Coming Soon Signage Appears at 2433 Yonge Street in Midtown

Bakery-patisserie-café concept takes over former Canada Computers space near Yonge & Eglinton

FiiZ Targets 20-25 Canadian Locations by Year-End as Dirty Soda Gains US Momentum

Founder Brands pivots from 200-square-foot test to flagship strategy while category validation accelerates south of the border

Four Years In, Little Ghosts Books Is Just Getting Started

How Toronto's first horror bookshop grew from a gap in the market into a publisher, festival, and community institution — and why its boldest moves are happening right now

Eggslut Confirms Two Toronto Locations for 2026

LA-based egg sandwich chain Eggslut is opening at King West (Spring) and Yonge & Dundas (Summer) 2026, marking the brand's first Canadian locations.

Bobby Flay’s Bobby’s Burgers Confirms Toronto Flagship at The Well — 65 Canadian Locations Planned

Led by Canadian franchisor Falcon Capital Group, the celebrity chef's fast-casual burger brand is using The Well as its launchpad for a 65-location national rollout

JLL Canada Releases 2026 Retail Outlook — and the Story Is More Nuanced Than the Numbers Suggest

JLL Canada's Scott Figler breaks down the Buy Canadian tension, what's actually filling empty Big Boxes, and which Toronto neighbourhoods are about to have a moment

Toronto’s Façade Grant Is Back — and It Won’t Last Long

The City is covering half the cost of storefront improvements for eligible Toronto businesses — here's how to make sure you're ready

Can Broadview and Gerrard Become a Destination? Hugh’s Room Is Betting on It

After surviving a forced closure and three years of homelessness, Hugh's Room Live reopened at 296 Broadview with community-backed financing—bringing predictable foot traffic to a neighbourhood "trapped in amber." The question is whether local retailers and restaurants are ready to capitalize on it.

Downtown Yonge’s Transformation: Food Service, Safety, and Advocacy

Executive Director Pauline Larsen on tracking 45 construction projects, 250 new businesses since 2022, and the Downtown BIA Alliance's "don't kill the golden goose" advocacy

Central Design Market Opens in Historic Bank of Upper Canada Building on Adelaide East

Brothers Mark and Rod Fraser combine furniture showroom with MRKT Cafe in 198-year-old National Historic Site, targeting East Toronto's underserved retail market

Mad Radish To Open Sixth Toronto Location as Liberty Village Becomes Health Hotspot

Mad Radish CEO Adam Tomczyk on Liberty Village expansion, Toronto's health QSR boom, Alberta plans, and navigating 2026's challenging market. Exclusive.

Valentine’s Day 2026: Self-Gifting Goes Mainstream as Pressure-Free Spending Takes Hold

New Lightspeed Commerce data shows 27% of consumers now buy Valentine's gifts for themselves as 62% feel no pressure to spend. Self-care replaces obligation as spending spreads across categories.

Not All Store Closures Are Created Equal: Understanding Retail Shifts in 2026

Retail strategist Tamara Szames explains why conflating natural lease expirations, retirements, consolidations, and brand failures misses what's actually happening in Toronto's market

CF Toronto Eaton Centre Transforms Into Olympic Experience Hub With Team Canada Partnership

Month-long activation brings curling, hockey and skiing to downtown Toronto as part of 10-property national rollout

Big Box Dominates Valentine’s Spending as Canadians Shift to Dining Experiences

Survey of 2,264 Canadian shoppers shows consolidated retail spending and rising experience demand, Field Agent reports

Tacos De Princesa Brings Elevated Mexican Street Food to the PATH

New concept fills authentic Mexican taco void in the PATH with chef-driven menu steps from St. Andrew Station

Most Read on 6ix Retail

Hundreds of Starbucks Workers Face Job Loss as Chain Closes Stores Across Toronto

Chain shutters underperforming stores as part of $1B restructuring, leaving baristas seeking new employment

What We Know: Toys “R” Us Canada Files for Creditor Protection

The iconic toy retailer seeks creditor protection after closing more than 50 stores in two years, owing $120 million to vendors as it evaluates strategic alternatives

Photo Report: Yorkdale Shopping Centre Transformation (August 2025)

Exclusive photo tour of Yorkdale Shopping Centre's August 2025 transformation, featuring Simons flagship, luxury corridor expansion, and major tenant changes.

SHEIN Pop-Up Returns to CF Toronto Eaton Centre Amid Major Retail Transformation

Ten-day pop-up occupies former Banana Republic space as Hudson's Bay fights for survival and Optimize Wealth moves into historic Bank of Toronto building

MUJI to Open Its Latest Toronto Location at The Well This September

Japanese lifestyle retailer takes over former Design Republic space as downtown mixed-use destination continues tenant expansion

Mandy’s Announces Multi-City Expansion, Adding Yonge & Eglinton and Canary District to Toronto Portfolio

Fast-casual chain Mandy's Salads reveals next phase of national expansion, adding new locations in Toronto and Ottawa while growing Montreal presence

Black Friday’s Latest Date Creates 26-Day Shopping Crunch for Canadian Retailers

Toronto liquidation expert Alex Hennick warns compressed holiday timeline will separate struggling retailers from survivors

Healthy Planet to Open 12,000 Square Foot Store at Yonge and Eglinton

Canada's largest family-owned organic grocer is opening a 12,000 sq ft two-level store at 2529 Yonge Street, targeting Q1 2026 opening in midtown Toronto.

EXCLUSIVE: Crunch Fitness Secures Landmark Financial District Location for Downtown Toronto Debut

Crunch Fitness signs 21,000-square-foot lease at 20 King West, transforming historic RBC gold vaults into premium PATH-connected gym targeting Gen Z demographic with fall 2025 opening.

Shake Shack Reveals Strategic Six-Site GTA Expansion

Premium burger chain announces six new GTA locations through 2026, creating 400+ jobs while expanding from downtown Toronto to suburban markets across the region.

Report: Discount Grocery Expansion Dominates Toronto Retail Market for 2025

No Frills leads urban push with multiple new locations as Canadian grocers focus on value-oriented growth

Supernatural Sets Sights on Yorkville for Flagship Wellness Location

Innovative wellness concept to introduce hyperbaric therapy and advanced biomarker testing in 4,300-square-foot space

Decathlon’s GTA Exit Opens Door for Experience-First Retail Revolution

Decathlon Canada closes five GTA stores in Brampton, Burlington, Markham, Scarborough and Vaughan, creating opportunities for experiential sporting goods retailers as Canadian market shifts toward community-focused retail.

In Toronto’s Retail Evolution, Yorkdale Shopping Centre Defines Industry Trends

How Oxford Properties reimagined retail anchors and customer experience to maintain Canada's highest-performing shopping centre

Beyond Points and Purchases: How Starbucks Masters the Science of Personalized Loyalty

Toronto retail loyalty consultant shares insights on how coffee giant's data-driven approach can be applied across sectors

Panera Bread To Make Downtown Toronto Comeback with College Street Location (Update: Now Open)

Popular bakery-cafe chain Panera Bread is returning to downtown Toronto with a new location at College and Spadina, marking its first urban presence since 2020.

Poulet Rouge Expands to Queen West Amid Transit Construction

Quebec chain's ninth Toronto location joins evolving retail mix as transit construction reshapes prime shopping corridor

UNIQLO, Nord Lyon Among Major Retailers Joining Union Station’s Spring 2025 Expansion

Japanese Retail Giant UNIQLO Takes Over Former Decathlon Space as French Patisserie Nord Lyon and MINISO Anchor Transit Hub's Evolving Retail Mix

Firehouse Subs Unveils Major GTA Expansion with Six New Locations Planned for 2025

Quick-service restaurant chain announces King East location, adapts store format for urban expansion while maintaining focus on community giving and local ownership

Toronto Retail Holds Strong: JLL Report Reveals Market Resilience in 2025 Outlook

Premium shopping centers lead recovery as experiential retail and food concepts drive renewed consumer engagement