Littler, the downtown Durham restaurant that emulated the cozy feel of an intimate dinner party or New York City bistro tucked into a side street, will close its doors on June 21.

The closure marks the end of a nine-year run for Littler, which opened on East Parrish Street in 2016. Itโ€™s also the second closure in two years for owner Gray Brooks, who shuttered his modern diner concept, Jack Tar and the Colonelโ€™s Daughter, in 2023. His popular wood-fired pizza restaurant, Pizzeria Toro, remains open.

While Brooks attributed Jack Tarโ€™s closure to diminished downtown foot traffic post-COVID, he sees Littlerโ€™s challenges as more structural: the restaurantโ€™s exceptionally small size, with just 36 seats, made financial viability an ongoing struggle.

โ€œThe numbers worked when we didnโ€™t have a sous chef, but that just put a really inhumane burden on the chef,โ€ Brooks says. โ€œWhen we did have a sous chef and were able to provide normal, good jobs for our kitchen staff, the financial burden on the restaurant was just too much.โ€

Littler is located at 110 Parrish Street. Photo from 2016 by Alex Boerner.

That said, โ€œCOVID could have played a role in a way that I didn’t realize at the time,โ€ Brooks says. Littler closed for the first two years of the pandemic and permanently shortened its hours upon reopening, closing an hour earlier each night than it had pre-pandemic. โ€œIt kind of bled us out.โ€

Brooks says that adding four or five tables to the restaurant could have made the difference between survival and closure, but expanding wasnโ€™t possible in the tiny space. He explored taking over the adjacent former Atomic Fern location, but city permitting requirements would have necessitated up to $300,000 in fireproofing and sprinkler system upgrades before any renovation work could begin.

Durham, North Carolina – Saturday September 24, 2016 – The Lamb Burger at Littler. Photo by Alex Boerner.

Brooks says he also thought about relocating the restaurant, โ€œbut the space was such a huge character in the story.โ€

โ€œI was reading an interview with Michael Stipe a couple months ago, and he was talking about the demise of R.E.M. and how they never do reunions,โ€™โ€ Brooks says. โ€œHe was saying, โ€˜We got together, we did this, we made a thing, and now itโ€™s over.โ€™ With Littler, itโ€™s like, โ€˜We did this thing. We did it the way we wanted to, the way we loved it.โ€™ Itโ€™s either go out the way we want to, or change what we are into something thatโ€™s not the same.โ€

Over its tenure, Littler gained a following for its rotating menu of seasonal New American cuisine.

The restaurantโ€™s current offerings include salmon crudo with Cara Cara oranges and tarragon, smoked hamachi pรขtรฉ, carrot cavatelli with harissa yogurt, celeriac au poivre with beluga lentils, and braised beef short rib with savoy cabbage and crispy shallot gremolata.

Looking ahead, Brooks plans to focus his energies on bolstering Pizzeria Toro. Heโ€™s recently acquired a mobile oven for catering and is developing a Toro-style version of New York pizza.

โ€œThat’s the upside,โ€ Brooks says. โ€œHopefully, now I’ll have a little more time to work on that.โ€

Reach Staff Writer Lena Geller at [email protected].Comment on this story at [email protected].

Lena Geller is a reporter for INDY, covering food, housing, and politics. She joined the staff in 2018 and previously ran a custom cake business.