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Bakery Space for Lease in West Richland, WA

Most bakeries in West Richland need 800–2,000 SF restaurant spaces with commercial kitchen infrastructure, proper venting, adequate parking, and visible frontage. The best-positioned areas are Van Giesen Street and Bombing Range Road.

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Reviewed by David Fritch, Commercial Real Estate Broker, licensed with Kiemle Hagood · Updated April 5, 2026 · Based on county parcel data, WSDOT traffic data, and broker review

Quick Facts

Typical Size
800–2,000 SF
Best Starting Areas
Van Giesen Street, Bombing Range Road
Typical Lease Term
3–5 years
Common Setup
prep kitchen + retail counter + display + storage
Typical Rate
$17–23/SF
Commercial Parcels
72

Best Areas for Bakery Space in West Richland

For most bakeries, the best location balances visibility, parking, and buildout feasibility. Grease traps, venting, and health department compliance can limit which spaces actually work.

Areas are ranked using kitchen infrastructure, venting feasibility, visibility, parking, and surrounding tenant mix for bakery users.

1

Van Giesen Street

Recommended

Van Giesen Street ranks #1 for bakeries because it combines customer parking and available spaces.

Best for: Bakeries that want customer parking and available spaces.

Watch for: strong drive-by traffic and signage visibility

Key signals

Visibility: High Parking: High Kitchen readiness: High Cost efficiency: High
2

Bombing Range Road

Most options available

Bombing Range Road ranks #2 for bakeries because it combines dining environment and customer accessibility.

Best for: Bakeries that want dining environment and customer accessibility.

Watch for: Suite quality and layout vary, so verify fit before touring.

Key signals

Visibility: Low Parking: Low Kitchen readiness: Low Cost efficiency: Low

What Bakeries Usually Need

Most bakeries need purpose-built or heavily modified space. Venting, grease traps, health department compliance, and parking create constraints that most standard commercial space does not meet.

Parking
Minimum 8–12 spaces per 1,000 SF of dining area; confirm with local code
Utilities
Commercial-grade venting, grease trap, water/sewer capacity, and heavy electrical
Best Layout
prep kitchen + retail counter + display + storage
Typical Size
800–2,000 SF — smaller for counter service; larger for full-service dining
Buildout Scope
Expect significant buildout unless the space was previously a restaurant
Health Compliance
Must meet Benton-Franklin Health District requirements before opening

What Drives Cost for Bakery Space in West Richland

Restaurant and food-service lease costs in West Richland depend heavily on existing buildout. A space with hood, ventilation, and grease trap already in place can save $50,000–150,000 in buildout.

Typical Asking Rent

$17–23/SF/yr

Est. Monthly (1,000 SF)

$1,417-1,917/mo

Lease Type

NNN

Rates are estimated ranges based on available market data. Actual rates vary by location, condition, and negotiation.

Lease type you will likely see

Restaurant spaces are typically NNN (triple net) or modified gross. Percentage rent clauses may apply in higher-traffic locations.

What pushes cost up

Spaces without existing kitchen infrastructure, high-visibility locations, outdoor seating potential, and liquor-license-eligible zones.

What keeps cost down

Second-generation restaurant space with existing hood, ventilation, and grease trap. The buildout savings alone can be $50K–150K.

What to compare before you choose

Ask the landlord what equipment conveys with the lease. A fully equipped second-gen space at a higher rent can be cheaper than a raw space at a lower rent once buildout is factored in.

How Leasing a Bakery Space Usually Works

If this is your first commercial lease, this is the sequence most bakeries follow in West Richland.

  1. 1

    Define concept, menu scope, and space needs

    Clarify kitchen requirements, dining capacity, bar/liquor needs, and outdoor seating plans.

  2. 2

    Review matching spaces

    We prioritize second-generation restaurant spaces with existing hood, ventilation, and grease trap infrastructure.

  3. 3

    Tour with your contractor

    Bring a restaurant-experienced contractor to assess buildout feasibility, health code compliance, and utility capacity.

  4. 4

    Make an offer

    Submit an LOI that addresses TI allowance, buildout timeline, equipment conveyance, and early access for permitting.

  5. 5

    Permits and buildout

    Health department approval, liquor license (if applicable), building permits, and contractor buildout run concurrently.

  6. 6

    Final inspections and opening

    Health inspection, fire inspection, certificate of occupancy, and soft opening before full launch.

FAQ: Leasing Bakery Space in West Richland

Common questions about leasing bakery space in West Richland.

How much space does a bakery need in West Richland?

Most bakeries need 800–2,000 SF. Counter-service concepts need the low end; full-service restaurants with bar seating need the high end or more.

What kitchen infrastructure should I look for?

Existing commercial hood venting, grease trap, adequate electrical service (200+ amps), and plumbing for your equipment. Retrofitting venting in a space that was never a restaurant costs $30,000–80,000 and is sometimes impossible.

Which parts of West Richland are the best starting points for a bakery?

Van Giesen Street and Bombing Range Road are usually the strongest options, with other commercial areas worth considering depending on your concept and target customers.

Should I lease a second-generation restaurant space?

Strongly recommended. A space with existing hood, grease trap, and plumbing can save $50,000–150,000 in buildout costs and 2–4 months in construction time.

What permits do I need before opening?

At minimum: Benton-Franklin Health District food service permit, building permits for any modifications, fire inspection, and a business license. Liquor licenses take 6–8 weeks in Washington.

How long does it take to open a bakery in West Richland?

In a second-generation space with existing kitchen infrastructure, 2–4 months is realistic. A full buildout from shell typically takes 4–8 months including permitting.

Sources, Review, and How We Rank Areas

This page combines local parcel data, submarket boundaries, WSDOT traffic counts, and broker review. Rankings help a small-business tenant understand where to start, then refine the search using live availability, quoted rent, and lease terms.

Data Inputs

  • Benton County Assessor parcel data
  • Franklin County GIS & parcel records
  • WSDOT traffic count stations
  • Local submarket boundaries

About This Page

Reviewed by:
David Fritch, Commercial Real Estate Broker, licensed with Kiemle Hagood
Last updated:
April 5, 2026
How recommendations work:
Submarket rankings combine kitchen infrastructure, venting feasibility, visibility, parking, and surrounding tenant mix for bakery users.

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