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Sweet Paris opens Bridgeland Central Cypress as part of its Houston footprint and scalable franchise growth led by the Kelton family.
Photo by Diego Romeo
In the quiet hours of morning, a familiar scent begins to drift into Cypress: a promise that Sweet Paris isn’t just a name on a sign, but a place where conversations soften the edges of the day. The Cypress flag marks a gentle step in a national arc: a brand that has learned to cluster success with steady local hands, a pattern that feels almost like a comforting ritual in a town that loves a good crêpe and a shared smile. The scene is not just about a storefront; it is about the mood of ease that the Kelton family—with a patient, guiding rhythm—brings to growth. This expansion is more than geography; it’s a signal that a well-loved café can be a neighborhood ritual.
Origins in the Woodlands and Austin – The journey began in 2018, when the Kelton family saw a dream in a concept they trusted. Their first two locations earned steady admiration, becoming touchstones in their communities. The years since have stitched their story to a larger plan: two strong stores, a growing partnership, and the faith that a brand built on hospitality can travel far. This opening in Cypress isn’t just a line on a map; it’s a chapter in a family’s day-to-day devotion to welcoming others over warm crêpes and softer conversations, the kind that linger long after the last crumb.
Sweet Paris is not a single storefront but a growing tapestry: 17 stores across Texas, Florida, Minnesota, and even Mexico, with a deliberate emphasis on clustering top-performing locations with experienced operators. The Bridgeland Central venue anchors the brand’s eighth Houston-area location, a milestone that reminds us how a neighborhood can become a shared ritual. Co-founder Allison Chavez, named to Nation’s Restaurant News’ Power List, speaks to a company focused on visionary growth and truly strong franchise performance.
“The Keltons have been top performers in our system, largely attributed to their ability to connect with customers and the local community alike.” said Allison Chavez, a nod to the human touch behind the numbers. The model emphasizes recruiting qualified partners for multi-unit opportunities, promising that growth can stay intimate even as it expands. The narrative that emerges is less about a single storefront and more about a shared table, where seasoned operators bring local warmth to a national idea.
With ongoing nationwide development, Sweet Paris aims to “Revive the Art of Eating Crêpes” one crêperie at a time. The Bridgeland Central venue, opened in July 2025, sits at 20240 Summit Point Crossing, Suite 150, Cypress, Texas, anchoring the brand’s eighth Houston-area location. The milestone aligns with broader expansion, including earlier talks of Arizona growth and Minnesota multi-unit opportunities. Local coverage notes Bridgeland energized the Cypress area as the brand extended its footprint in the Houston metro.
The moment lands at a time when the brand is weaving a national tapestry of partnerships and places, and Bridgeland is a centerpiece of that map. As customers stroll past the warm glow of a storefront that feels familiar, they’re also stepping into a story of thoughtful expansion—one that respects the town’s rhythm while inviting new neighbors to linger over coffee and crêpes.
Sweet Paris now operates 17 stores across Texas, Florida, Minnesota, and Mexico, with a clear intent to extend beyond its Texas and Florida roots. The Twin Cities location joins an array of markets, including plans in Arizona and Minnesota. Leadership recognition, including Allison Chavez on the Power List, underscores an industry confidence in founder-led growth and franchise performance. The company is actively recruiting for multi-unit opportunities, signaling a scalable path for operators seeking new markets.
The pattern isn’t merely about numbers; it’s about a cadence of partnerships, local engagement, and a product that invites customers to slow down and savor. As markets shift, the brand’s promise remains: to offer a comforting, well-crafted experience that travels well, from a storefront in Cypress to markets that feel equally welcome. Growth, then, is a quiet, patient art—as much about people as it is about places.
The sugared-light of success here is not a blaze of headlines but a steady, hospitable glow. Bridgeland’s opening aligns with a broader philosophy: partnerships with strong local operators, and a visible commitment to community engagement. The Keltons’ ongoing emphasis on youth and local development in their existing stores, paired with the brand’s Eat Here, Feed There program, demonstrates how expansion can stay rooted in social impact and neighborly hospitality. It’s a reminder that a national concept can feel like a neighborhood friend when it chooses to listen as much as it speaks.
As Sweet Paris continues to add markets, its leverage—humility, shared tables, and a scalable ownership model—points to a resilient future. The story isn’t simply about more stores; it’s about keeping the warmth of a café that invites lingering conversations, a place where guests feel at home even when the menu wanders beyond the familiar.