we wrote about the new Starbucks thatโ€™s coming to Ninth Street, just a few doors down from the independently owned Triangle Coffee Shop, a staple thatโ€™s cherished by locals. Many of our readers, like the aforementioned locals, are worried about what this means for locally owned businesses in Durham.ย 

โ€œStarbucks comes in the final stages of Gentrification,โ€ wrote Facebook commenter Jeremy Gilchrist.

ย โ€œItโ€™s a horrible decision to allow a Starbucks in this location,โ€ wrote commenter John Hite. โ€œSome of the things that make Durham great are being undone by allowing chains to invade downtown.โ€

ย But some readers were more sanguine.ย 

ย โ€œAnyone else remember when Starbucks only survived a year on Hillsborough St. across from State, and then when it closed someone tagged them with โ€œSTARBUCKS: you got SERVED,โ€ thus perfectly dating this event?,โ€ wrote Facebook commenter A Holt Williams.

ย โ€œI see this issue both ways,โ€ wrote commenter Justin Gorsage. โ€œOn the one hand 9th street does have a lot of charm. However, business is business and Triangle can either evolve and compete with Starbucks or they can double down on catering to a limited Customer base and ultimately get crushed. Time will tell what they choose to do.โ€

ย Ultimately, commenter Joshua Paterni says, the fate of local business is totally in the hands of locals.ย 

ย โ€œLook, itโ€™s up to Durham residents to decide what kind of businesses thrive. Thereโ€™s no magical approval board that gets to control what kinds of businesses operate downtown. People vote with their patronage. … The chains that have come to 9th Street and downtown proper havenโ€™t fared well (Waffle House on 9th, that sandwich chain on Main St.). In my opinion Durham lacks a good coffee shop. โ€ฆ Whatever has prevented a great community coffee shop from thriving in urban Durham, I donโ€™t think this Starbucks opening changes things a whole lot. I hope people just donโ€™t go there.โ€