Croc's 19th Street Bistro
Croc's 19th Street Bistro is a restaurant located on 19th Street in Virginia Beach, Virginia, within the ViBe Creative District near the city's oceanfront. The bistro is co-owned by Laura Wood Habr, who, along with developer Andrew Fine of The Runnymede Corporation, has worked to reinvigorate the historic 19th Street corridor as a center of dining, culture, and commerce.[1] The restaurant serves a blend of American and international cuisine with an emphasis on fresh seafood and locally sourced ingredients. It has built a following among Virginia Beach residents and tourists drawn to the oceanfront area, and it operates regular weekend service including Sunday brunch.[2]
History
Croc's 19th Street Bistro was established on 19th Street, a corridor that had for decades served as a commercial and cultural artery near the Virginia Beach oceanfront. The street's history includes a mix of small retail businesses, art spaces, and food establishments that have shifted over the years as the city's development priorities changed. The bistro's founding was part of a broader effort to bring renewed energy to this stretch of Virginia Beach.
Co-owner Laura Wood Habr has been central to the restaurant's identity and direction. She and Andrew Fine, president of The Runnymede Corporation, began collaborating on a shared vision to bring the 19th Street area back to life, combining real estate development with local business investment.[3] That collaboration helped shape not just the bistro but the surrounding commercial district, which eventually became known as the ViBe Creative District. The bistro's continued operation reflects the longer arc of that revitalization effort.
Over the years the restaurant expanded its physical footprint, adding a second floor that includes a private dining room and bar area. It has also grown its programming, hosting live music, wine tastings, and community events that draw a mix of locals and visitors.
Geography
Croc's 19th Street Bistro sits on 19th Street in the central oceanfront area of Virginia Beach, within what is now designated the ViBe Creative District. This part of the city runs roughly between the Atlantic Avenue corridor and the neighborhoods just inland, and it includes a dense mix of galleries, boutique shops, restaurants, and creative businesses. The street itself blends older commercial buildings with more recent renovations, reflecting the area's ongoing transformation.
The bistro's location puts it close to the Virginia Beach Boardwalk and the Atlantic Ocean, both within walking distance. Neptune Square, a historic commercial district, is also nearby. The broader 19th Street corridor is home to more than 80 businesses, many of which have organized collectively around shared interests in the area's economic and cultural development.[4] Adjacent to the bistro are boutique shops, art galleries, and other food and beverage establishments that together create a walkable commercial environment.
Culture
Croc's 19th Street Bistro has contributed to Virginia Beach's cultural identity through its programming and community presence. It's not just a place to eat. The restaurant hosts live music, wine tastings, and food events that bring together local artists, musicians, and chefs. These gatherings draw a varied crowd and contribute to the neighborhood's reputation as a destination for creative activity.
The bistro also hosts specialty brunch events. Sunday brunch service has become a fixture, with themed events, including drag brunch performances, drawing significant local attention and social media engagement.[5] This kind of programming reflects a broader shift in how Virginia Beach restaurants use weekend service as a cultural event rather than simply a meal period.
The bistro's menu draws on the region's agricultural and maritime traditions. Local farms and fisheries supply many of its ingredients, a practice that has made it a model for other restaurants in the city working to connect their menus to regional producers.
Economy
The bistro plays a visible role in the local economy of Virginia Beach's central oceanfront district. As a long-running establishment, it provides employment for chefs, servers, and support staff, and its success has contributed to the commercial appeal of the 19th Street corridor more broadly.
The restaurant's presence also supports tourism. Virginia Beach draws millions of visitors annually to its oceanfront, and dining establishments along the 19th Street corridor are a key part of that visitor experience. The city's Convention and Visitors Bureau has noted that food and beverage establishments are among the primary reasons tourists visit Virginia Beach, and restaurants like Croc's are central to that appeal.[6]
The bistro's location within the ViBe Creative District also connects it to a coordinated economic development effort. The collaboration between Laura Wood Habr and Andrew Fine of The Runnymede Corporation was designed in part to attract investment and foot traffic to a stretch of 19th Street that had experienced commercial decline. The bistro has been one of the anchoring businesses in that recovery.[7]
Attractions
The bistro draws visitors for its food and its atmosphere. The interior blends coastal design elements with locally made artwork, and the space includes both a main dining room and a second-floor bar and private event area. The restaurant's layout makes it suitable for casual meals, private gatherings, and larger events.
Its location on 19th Street adds to its appeal. The Virginia Beach Boardwalk is within easy walking distance, as is Neptune Square and the broader ViBe Creative District, which includes galleries and creative businesses that give the neighborhood a distinct character. Visitors can combine a meal at the bistro with a walk along the oceanfront or a stop at nearby art and retail spaces. The Sunday brunch program, which has included themed events and live entertainment, has made the bistro a destination in its own right on weekends.[8]
Getting There
Croc's 19th Street Bistro is accessible by car, public transit, bicycle, and on foot. For drivers, 19th Street connects to Virginia Beach Boulevard and Interstate 264, both of which serve the central oceanfront district. Parking is available on the street and in nearby lots.
Public transit routes operated by Hampton Roads Transit serve the area, with bus lines connecting the bistro's neighborhood to other parts of Virginia Beach and the broader Hampton Roads region. The street is lined with sidewalks and marked bike lanes, and the flat terrain of Virginia Beach's oceanfront district makes cycling a practical option. Visitors arriving at the Virginia Beach Boardwalk can walk to the bistro in a few minutes.
Neighborhoods
Croc's 19th Street Bistro sits within the ViBe Creative District, a designated arts and culture zone in the central oceanfront area of Virginia Beach. The district was developed in part through the collaboration between Laura Wood Habr and Andrew Fine, who saw the potential to transform a stretch of 19th Street that had lost commercial momentum.[9] The district now includes galleries, studios, restaurants, and retail shops that together form one of the more cohesive commercial neighborhoods in the city.
The immediate area around the bistro includes the historic downtown corridor and the Neptune Square district, which mixes residential buildings with commercial activity. The neighborhood has changed significantly over the past two decades, with new businesses and development projects reshaping its character. Still, older buildings along 19th Street remain, giving the area a layered quality that reflects the city's history.
Education
The central district of Virginia Beach, where the bistro is located, is served by Virginia Beach City Public Schools, which operates elementary, middle, and high schools throughout the area. These institutions serve a dense urban population and offer programs in academic and extracurricular areas. The bistro has at times hosted community events that connect local businesses with schools and student groups, reflecting the broader pattern of engagement between commercial establishments and the surrounding residential community.
Private and charter schools also operate in the vicinity, serving families with a range of educational priorities. The presence of these institutions contributes to the neighborhood's character as a place where families and young professionals live alongside the district's commercial activity.
Demographics
The central district of Virginia Beach reflects the city's overall demographic diversity. According to the 2020 U.S. Census, Virginia Beach is one of the more populous cities in Virginia and includes significant African American, Latino, and Asian American communities alongside a large white population. The oceanfront district draws a mix of long-term residents, younger renters, and seasonal visitors, giving the neighborhood an unusually varied demographic profile.
The bistro's customer base reflects this mix. Local residents, hotel guests, day-trippers from the broader Hampton Roads region, and tourists from outside Virginia all make up its clientele. Weekend brunch events have attracted a particularly diverse crowd, with social media posts from events at the bistro showing broad participation across age groups and backgrounds.[10] That variety is consistent with the neighborhood's identity as one of the more open and culturally active parts of Virginia Beach.
- ↑ "Andrew Fine and Laura Wood Habr began collaborating on their vision to reinvigorate this once-historic and now-elapsed area", ViBe Creative District.
- ↑ "Friday: The Rainbow Cactus Sunday: Croc's 19th Street Bistro", Facebook, 2024.
- ↑ "Andrew Fine and Laura Wood Habr began collaborating on their vision to reinvigorate this once-historic and now-elapsed area", ViBe Creative District.
- ↑ "More than 80 businesses along the Virginia Beach oceanfront are planning a take...", WAVY TV 10 on Facebook, 2024.
- ↑ "Who is coming to @dragme2thestage #brunch at the...", Instagram / mrskashadavis, 2025.
- ↑ "More than 80 businesses along the Virginia Beach oceanfront are planning a take...", WAVY TV 10 on Facebook, 2024.
- ↑ "Andrew Fine and Laura Wood Habr began collaborating on their vision to reinvigorate this once-historic and now-elapsed area", ViBe Creative District.
- ↑ "Who is coming to @dragme2thestage #brunch at the...", Instagram / mrskashadavis, 2025.
- ↑ "Andrew Fine and Laura Wood Habr began collaborating on their vision to reinvigorate this once-historic and now-elapsed area", ViBe Creative District.
- ↑ "Virginia Beach I am coming thru. Join us this Sunday, February...", Instagram, 2025.