‘I love this community’: Black-owned running store on South Side in race to open new shop

To anyone else, it may have looked like an unusual gathering: several dozen people in athletic wear, surrounding a bright blue shipping container in Bronzeville.

To Ian Gonzalez, though, it was a testament to three years of hard work. A community built from the ground up. The crowd had come on a cool Sunday morning to celebrate Gonzalez’s business — Last Lap Cornerstore — before its temporary closure in April 2023.

“It was the saddest joy I’ve ever felt,” Gonzalez said. “For the community to come out and say they see me and show the love, that was beautiful.”

The 34-year-old decided that Last Lap, a South Side Black-owned running store in Boxville, had outgrown its portable home. Now, Gonzalez hopes to raise $200,000 to open a brick-and-mortar shop in Hyde Park, bolstering a vibrant running culture there.

“My main focus is to give new runners, especially Black and brown runners, the opportunity to try the sport out, to enjoy the sport, to find themselves in this sport,” Gonzalez said.

Since the beginning of the pandemic, there’s been a surge of new and expanding diverse running clubs in Chicago. Still, less than 5% of running companies are owned by people of color nationwide, according to the Running Industry Diversity Coalition. Indeed, Last Lap may be the only Black-owned running store on the South Side, according to Build Bronzeville, a community organization that leads the Boxville initiative.

“(The running) industry, which is predominantly white, can be extremely hard to break into,” said Sandria Washington, the director of engagements and partnerships at Build Bronzeville. “I think what he’s shown is that there’s a community and there’s a space for runners of color.”

Boxville, a cluster of small businesses located in shipping containers in Bronzeville, seeks to uplift minority entrepreneurs who otherwise may not have a clear path to business ownership, Washington said.

Gonzalez, of Woodlawn, founded Last Lap in 2021. He used all of his savings to open, about $8,000, much of it from stimulus and unemployment checks.

Gonzalez’s 2 ½ years in business were far from easy. He often struggled to afford rent, to buy groceries or pay his phone bill. But it was worth it, Gonzalez said, to cultivate an inclusive South Side running community.

“These runners had a glass ceiling,” he said. “So many of us had to leave our community to get the basic necessities needed for running.”

Eight years ago, Gonzalez hadn’t considered himself an entrepreneur — or a runner. He had shuffled through various odd jobs, eventually working at a Nike store in Bucktown. Suddenly, he was surrounded by runners.