This articleis missing information about the company's expansion to and holdings in Canada and Thailand. Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on thetalk page.(January 2024)
Au Bon Pain serves baked goods such as bread, pastries, croissants, bagels; tea, coffee, and espresso beverages; breakfast foods such as egg sandwiches; and lunch items such as soups, salads, and sandwiches. The company also offerscatering services.[6]
Au Bon Pain was established in 1976 at theFaneuil Hall marketplace in Boston by the French baking equipment manufacturerPavailler.[8] Conceived as a showcase for Pavailler's ovens, the company was founded by Louis Rapuano, Pavailler, and two minor investors, with Pavailler providing the baking machinery. Its early locations sold croissants, pastries, and bread made by French bakers, and by 1977, Au Bon Pain had opened additional stores inHackensack, New Jersey, and New York City.[9]
In 1978,venture capitalist Louis I. Kane acquired the company forUS$1.5 million (equivalent toUS$7.2million in 2024), after being drawn in by the smell of its baked goods.[5] Kane shifted the brand's focus from selling ovens to baked products directly to customers. Francois Marin was hired to open and manage the first Au Bon Pain café in Boston'sQuincy Market.[10]
By 1980, Au Bon Pain's sales had surpassedUS$1 million (equivalent toUS$3.8million in 2024), though the company remained unprofitable.[11][12] Facing financial difficulties, Au Bon Pain was nearingbankruptcy in 1981, when Ronald M. Shaich and his father acquired a 60 percent stake, setting it on a new course.[12]
The company went public in 1991 through aninitial public offering.[13] Two years later, it purchased the Saint Louis Bread Company, the precursor toPanera Bread, forUS$23 million (equivalent toUS$50.1million in 2024),[12][13][14] and acquired the U.S. bakery locations ofWarburtons, which were converted into Au Bon Pain cafés.[15]
The mid-1990s brought mixed fortunes: after reporting losses in 1996, the company announced plans to upgrade its store interiors,[16] and in 1997, it explored options to expand to Peru.[17]
In 1999, Au Bon Pain Co. Inc.—later renamed Panera Bread—sold its Au Bon Pain division toBruckmann, Rosser, Sherrill & Co., and the following year, Compass Group acquired it.[18] That same year, the company signed afranchise agreement with Gourmet Coffee Co. Ltd. to open its first cafés inTaipei, Taiwan.[19]
In 2005, Au Bon Pain's management, together withPNC Financial Services, purchased a 75 percent share of the company from Compass, which retained the remaining 25 percent.[21] Three years later,LNK Partners acquired a controlling interest.[22]
During the 2010s, Au Bon Pain launched a nationwide remodeling program,[23] expanded to more than 200 locations,[24] and committed to sourcing onlyfree-range eggs by 2017.[25] Under CEO Sue Morelli, it was recognized as one of Massachusetts' top female-led companies in 2014,[26] and in 2015, the company named Katherine See its executive chef.[27] Morelli retired in 2016 and was succeeded by Ray Blanchette.[28]
On November 8, 2017, Panera Bread announced its acquisition of Au Bon Pain, reuniting the two brands after nearly two decades apart.[13][29][30][31] Following the deal, founder Ron Shaich stepped down as Panera's CEO and was succeeded by Blaine Hurst.[32]
After years of declining urban foot traffic, the chain closed its finalCambridge, Massachusetts café in 2019,[33] and in 2021, the company was sold again—this time toAMPEX Brands, which acquired roughly $60 million in assets and franchise rights for 131 additional locations.[34][35] AMPEX moved the headquarters from Boston to Texas.[36][37]
TheCOVID-19 pandemic caused further closures, reducing the U.S. store count to 123, though new openings began under AMPEX's ownership, including one inQueens Center Mall in New York City.[24] The last remaining Boston location, atSouth Station, closed in 2024.[38]