KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — From object adult to object down, coffee is always brewing during Vienna Coffee in a Regas Building.
“It’s a comfort. We possibly splash it to make us watchful or we splash it only to sooth ourselves,” pronounced Co-Owner Marc Atchley about coffee. “Conversations and coffee unequivocally go together.”
And, that’s a idea during Vienna Coffee in a Regas Building in Downtown Knoxville.
“Community happens over a crater of coffee,” Atchley said.
Nearly dual months ago, new owners took over a coffee shop. Customers won’t notice a difference, though a village will.
“This was an event for us to take a coffee emporium that already has a good code in a flourishing business area and demeanour during from a viewpoint of being really conscious about ministry,” Atchley said.
The new association is named Watauga Coffee after a hotel that stood in a space between a 1930s and 1940s. It will flow all of a increase into method during home and abroad.
While a business indication is new, Atchley says a opportunities to offer will change from contracting nonprofit clients, donating coffee and pastries, even providing village space.
Atchley and his family are heading by example.
“It’s a large transition,” certified Atchley. “I’ve got a 16-year-old and soon-to-be 15-year-old, a just-turned 12-year-old and a 9-year-old.”
They’re relocating to Athens, Greece this summer to turn missionaries. The family will be partnering with a Greek Evangelical Church there to assistance refugees with simple needs from denunciation and housing to supervision services.
And, Atchley is anticipating to eventually supplement coffee to a list.
“To see coffee shops in each community, that’s a large dream.”
Paying it brazen either it’s Athens, Greece or Downtown Knoxville.
“We’re called to go into a universe and evangelise a gospel,” pronounced Atchley. “We can move that summary by a crater of coffee.”