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Buckets opens inside House Three Thirty, serving comfort classics, community pride, and hands-on hospitality training through LeBron James’s I Promise mission.
Photo by hiding ninja
There’s a particular kind of warmth that greets you at Buckets, the newly opened restaurant tucked inside House Three Thirty in Akron, Ohio. On April 1, 2026, the doors opened—not just to a classic comfort menu, but to a gentle experiment in hope and second chances.
The aroma of fried chicken and burgers mingles with a sense of Akron pride in the air, as every detail—down to menu prices ending in .23 cents, a nod to LeBron James’s jersey—reminds guests where they are and what this place means. It’s more than a meal: it’s a feeling of belonging.
From the welcoming front-of-house team to kitchen staff, everyone on shift carries a story, many of them rooted in Akron’s I Promise Program. Here, comfort food is served by neighbors—students, parents, and graduates who’ve trained, sometimes for the first time, in the gentle art of hospitality. Menu icons like fried and roasted chicken, burgers, smashburgers, and wings nod to old favorites, but every plate is matched with an undercurrent of learning and dignity.
At Buckets, the atmosphere gently encourages guests to linger: to cheer for the staff during live performances, to chuckle at the sports-bar-meets-tavern décor, and to discover rooms themed lovingly after LeBron’s journey. Every moment feels like a toast to Akron’s past, present, and the hands that will shape its future.
Far beyond chicken and chocolate chip cookies, Buckets shines as a gentle intersection of food, family, and future wonder. The restaurant is just one piece of House Three Thirty, a sprawling hub designed by the LeBron James Family Foundation to be more than a destination—it’s a promise kept with the city, and those who call it home.
House Three Thirty opened in early 2023 as a kind of living room for Akron: retail, dining, financial coaching, entertainment, even a museum—all under one welcoming roof. The arrival of Buckets delivers on the Foundation’s vision to weave education and job training into the city’s fabric, turning a simple meal into a step along a larger path.
What sets Buckets apart isn’t found on the menu, but in its gentle daily rituals: each shift serves as a learning lab, inviting I Promise students, families, and even former teachers to participate in everything from recipe tastings to guest greeting. Culinary director Aaron Blank and his team have quietly nurtured raw talent, with each staff member trained for weeks—many learning the ropes of hospitality for the first time.
Sitting in the gentle hum of Buckets’ dining room, you feel not only cared for, but part of a larger experiment in self-belief—a place where confidence is plated alongside house-made wings and hearty sides.
Inside Buckets, every flavor tells a story—each one carefully shaped not just by culinary director Aaron Blank, but by a chorus of cooks, servers, and volunteers deeply rooted in the I Promise Program. Staff and community partners, like Nick “Notch” Lopez, have gathered around the kitchen to taste-test new dishes, ensuring that local whimsy and pride infuse even the humble smashburger (meet the Akron Hammer).
The result is a menu that walks the gentle line between nostalgia and discovery: fried and roasted chicken dinners for the soul, bold wings in flavors like Dream Crusher for the curious, chocolate chip skillet cookies for sweet endings. Even cocktails and Ohio-made beers offer familiar notes—comfort, crafted to help guests slow down and savor both the food and the feeling.
Each plate comes with a side of mentorship: those at the griddle may be parents rediscovering confidence, students learning hospitality basics, or former teachers now leading by example. From uniform designs—“B” intertwined with “23”—to the energy in every themed room, the experience is layered, inviting diners to notice the invisible hands turning routine jobs into sources of pride and possibility.
Buckets quietly insists: the best comfort meals are those made together, tasting of hope and second chances.
At its heart, Buckets is a tapestry of big dreams woven through gentle acts: cooking, serving, welcoming, encouraging. Michele Campbell, executive director of the Foundation, sums it with a softness that lingers: “It’s giving people life skills, giving people confidence and letting them believe in themselves.” For LeBron James, the feeling is full-circle—Ambassadors who began the journey with the program are now in line chef coats and managing day-to-day with calm assurance.
Buckets measures success not only by how many orders go out the window, but by the small, brave milestones of those in the kitchen and at the tills—those earning paychecks and life lessons in equal portion.
Early reviews have echoed what many locals hoped: the response is a slam dunk for food and mission alike. Active hiring continues among I Promise families, and every shift offers the gentle possibility of upward momentum—transforming what might seem a simple job into the start of a new chapter.
For guests, that knowledge is tucked into every warm roll and hearty main: hospitality, here, has been designed not just to comfort, but to uplift.
Buckets’ opening nestles sweetly in the current movement of socially driven hospitality—yet it stands out, offering a rare blend of real-time job training and local ownership within a bustling community hub. While LeBron James’s business past has spanned ambassador roles and Blaze Pizza investments, Buckets signals a homegrown approach, rooted in the gentle soil of Akron’s neighborhoods.
The model reaches further: within House Three Thirty, collaborations like the community-staffed Starbucks and Chase financial advice center demonstrate how everyday spaces—cup by cup, conversation by conversation—can be gently redirected for enduring community benefit.
While firm details about Buckets’ revenue or replication plans remain out of sight, there is solace in the soft focus on what is visible: lives changed, pride restored, a city’s favorite flavors now garnished with real opportunity. For communities seeking repair and renewal, Buckets may indeed serve as a gentle template—proof that hospitality, when paired with teaching and care, can transform the everyday into something extraordinary.