Longtime customers say goodbye as Tribella Bar and Grill in Batavia closes its doors after 26 years

Owners of Acquaviva have purchased the building from owners

Bartender Katie Smith pours a drink for a customer at Tribella Bar and Grill in Batavia on Sunday, March 26, 2023.

Over the years, Wendy and David Beebe spent a lot of time at Tribella Bar and Grill in Batavia.

The St. Charles couple was enjoying one last meal at the restaurant March 26 before it closed its doors.

“We’ve come here for a long, long time,” Wendy Beebe said. “This is my favorite restaurant. The food is great. The food, the atmosphere, everything is just wonderful. We always came here for my birthday and for other special occasions. So it’s really sad that it’s closing.”

The owners of Acquaviva have bought the building from Christine DiGuglielmo, who co-owned the restaurant with her husband, Joe. Acquaviva recently closed its restaurant on Water Street in downtown Batavia. It has another location, Acquaviva Winery, in Maple Park.

“The food, the atmosphere, everything is just wonderful.”

—  Longtime customer Wendy Beebe

Tribella, an Italian-American bistro located at 1900 Mill St., was in business for 26 years.

Like other businesses, Tribella was hit hard by the pandemic.

Co-Owner s Joe, left, and Christine,right, DiGuglielmo pose with their son Joe DiGuglielmo in front of Tribella Bar and Grill in Batavia on Sunday, March 26, 2023, the last day their restaurant was open.

“The business never recovered after COVID,” Christine DiGuglielmo said. “Times have changed. We’re a nice sit-down restaurant and that’s kind of gone away. People are more fast-paced. You can’t survive with a 6,000-square-foot sit-down nice restaurant on only to-go orders. We lost so much money. And the cost of everything has gone up and business never came back.”

Tribella first opened its doors in 1997. The Sugar Grove couple bought the restaurant from its original owners in June 2007.

Bartender Katie Smith is going to miss seeing the customers.

“They’re like family to us,” she said. “I always say it’s the Cheers bar of restaurants. People have been coming here since it opened. I met a couple these last few days who said they had their first date here in 1998. We’re all pretty close-knit.”

Smith has worked at Tribella since 2015. During that time, she has worked as a bartender, server and manager at the restaurant.

One of the longtime customers sitting at the bar Sunday was Rod Carver of Plainfield. He previously lived in Batavia.

He has been coming to the restaurant since it opened.

“The people are friendly,” he said. “You get to know everyone.”

Carver is a friend of the owners and babysat their son, Joe, when he was younger.

Joe DiGuglielmo was glad to see so many longtime customers.

“We tried to invite everybody back this last week just to say goodbye,” he said. “You hear from people about how they were here for their high school homecoming and then they had their wedding rehearsal here and their kids’ baptism here. So that’s the amazing part about being around for 20 some years. You really are tied to a community as far as being a part of their lives.”