
A one-time downtown Kissimmee bank at 30 Broadway could soon trade teller windows for caipirinhas, with plans on the table to convert the building into Nosso Quintal Brazilian Bar & Grill. The concept leans into a lively, communal "quintal" – or backyard – feel, with skewers, cocktails and live music all aimed at pulling more nighttime crowds onto Broadway as downtown adds fresh restaurants and redevelopment interest.
According to Orlando Business Journal, city documents show the project is folded into a roughly $1.6 million redevelopment package, and the city is weighing a proposed $76,000 incentive to help support the conversion. The filing identifies the address as 30 Broadway and describes the effort as a private redevelopment that runs through the city’s standard public review process.
What’s planned for 30 Broadway
As outlined by Experience Kissimmee, Nosso Quintal is pitched as a culturally immersive Brazilian bar and restaurant built around traditional flavors, skewers, cocktails, and live performances. The directory lists the Broadway address and frames the spot as a community-focused nightlife hub meant to inject more energy into downtown evenings.
Where this fits downtown
The bank-to-bar conversion lands in the middle of a broader push to turn Broadway into a more walkable, nightlife-friendly corridor, including the city’s two-phase Connect Kissimmee complete-streets effort that will narrow lanes, add bike paths and widen sidewalks to encourage more people on foot. A recent report that puts the street overhaul at about $16.3 million noted that Kissimmee has also rolled out major downtown proposals, officials say, that are designed to attract additional visitors and businesses. WESH covered the larger civic center and hotel plan earlier this year.
Local listings and plan review documents first surfaced in trade and area outlets, and What Now reports that the review paperwork points to a suite at 30 Broadway and that a co-owner was not immediately available for comment when contacted. So far, neither a construction schedule nor an opening date has been announced.
The project will still have to clear the usual city permitting steps and any incentive approvals handled through Kissimmee’s economic development process. Per the city’s Grow Kissimmee incentive page, the city offers several programs, like building-permit fee reimbursement and development-review fee incentives, that qualifying downtown projects can tap.









