
Haraz Coffee House, a Michigan-born Yemeni coffee chain, is lining up a Mountain View debut this June inside The Landsby mixed-use development, bringing its growing national footprint to the city’s downtown strip. The café is slated to seat about 96 people and will pour traditional Yemeni brews like Harazi Mufawar and Jubani alongside espresso standards, matcha and a tight savory menu. Local franchisee Savi Singh, who left a corporate job in early 2024, is set to run the Mountain View shop, which is expected to function as another late-night, community-focused hangout on the retail corridor.
Those specifics were first reported by Palo Alto Online, which notes the café will tuck into the ground-floor retail at 2580 California St., Suite H. Plans call for complimentary Wi-Fi, board games and a small recording nook for Singh’s “All One” podcast, plus a roughly even split of indoor and outdoor seating. According to the outlet, the menu will feature sandwiches, pastries and the chain’s signature honeybee bites, and the Mountain View outpost is one of two Bay Area locations Singh is working on, with another site eyed in Santa Clara.
From Harazi Mufawar To Cold-Foam Clouds
Haraz’s online menu shows the chain pairing Yemeni specialties such as Harazi Mufawar, Jubani and Turkish coffee pots with matcha lattes, fruit-forward refreshers and a “cloud” series finished with cold foam. Per Haraz Coffee House, the offerings blend traditional pots and spiced teas with the kind of familiar café drinks most American coffee fans already know. National coverage of the Yemeni-coffee boom notes that many shops lean on sun-dried Yemeni beans, and that Haraz is among the brands quickly expanding across the United States, bringing longer hours and a different flavor profile to mainstream coffee culture. AP News has profiled the trend and cites Haraz’s growing presence.
Why The Landsby? Patio, Foot Traffic And Long Hours
The Landsby, at California Street and San Antonio Road, is a newer mixed-use complex that was designed with generous restaurant patio space, a setup that appears to have appealed to the franchisee. A project overview from Lockehouse highlights strong pedestrian counts and ground-floor retail aimed at boosting dining tenants, making the site a natural fit for a community-oriented café. As reported by Palo Alto Online, the Mountain View Haraz will plug into that lineup and is expected to serve customers from early mornings through late nights.
Who Owns It? Local Paperwork Spells It Out
Public records with the Santa Clara County clerk show a fictitious business name statement for “Haraz Coffee House” at 2580 California St., Suite H, listing All One Cafe LLC as the registrant.
Haraz has yet to post a firm grand-opening date for the Mountain View café on its corporate pages, though the brand’s site is where menus, active locations and new-store announcements typically appear. Corporate and franchise materials point to additional Bay Area openings through the year, with the Mountain View spot adding to a growing wave of Yemeni-style coffeehouses spreading across California and the rest of the country.









