Delray Beach Gives Subculture Coffee 90 Days to Address Parking Dispute After Heated Commission Fight

by News Desk | Apr 6, 2026 · 10:09 am | Delray Beach News

Delray Beach Gives Subculture Coffee 90 Days to Address Parking Dispute After Heated Commission Fight (Image Credit: Subculture Coffee Roasters)

Last Updated: Apr 6, 2026 · 10:09 am

Join the conversation.

Most reader discussion happens on our Facebook page. Follow Boca Post for breaking news and join the conversation.

This Advertising Spot Is Available

Reach Boca Raton readers daily through trusted local news coverage.

Secure this placement and get your business in front of thousands of local readers.

Limited placements available. Local businesses only.

DELRAY BEACH, FL (Boca Post) (Copyright © 2026) — A dispute between Delray Beach and Subculture Coffee Roasters has escalated into a broader fight over parking, permitted use, and whether one of the city’s better-known coffee shops can keep operating as it does now.

The conflict centers on Subculture Coffee Roasters in Delray Beach, owned by Rodney Mayo. The business has been open in the area for more than a year and sells coffee, cold brew, bakery items and other grab-and-go products. It has also hosted community-oriented activities tied to the kind of coffeehouse model Mayo says was always part of the concept.

At the center of the case is parking. City officials have raised concerns that the business does not meet Delray Beach parking requirements for its size and use. Subculture has eight off-street parking spaces. The required amount cited by the city is 44.

After a March 31 special commission meeting, Delray Beach commissioners gave Mayo 90 days to come up with a plan addressing the parking issue. That decision left the business operating under uncertainty while the city and the owner remain far apart on what the property is, how it should be regulated, and what happens next.

Mayo has gone public with his frustration, accusing the city of trying to shut the business down rather than work toward a solution. In a lengthy statement, he said he entered a recent meeting with city officials expecting a productive discussion but instead faced hostility and an unwillingness to compromise. He said Subculture brought city-approved licenses, final inspections, no code violations, and point-of-sale data that he said showed 67% of customers are grab-and-go and stay less than 15 minutes.

He also said city representatives repeatedly accused him of misleading the Delray Beach City Commission and would not define what percentage would qualify as a “majority” use for that customer base. Mayo argued the parking standard now being applied is impossible to meet and, by his account, has not been required of any other Delray Beach business in the same way.

The dispute is not limited to parking. Mayo said the city’s interpretation of what is allowed at the coffee shop would bar a wide range of activities associated with coffeehouse culture, including open mic events, poetry readings, art displays, trivia, chess, live music, book club meetings and even student study groups, depending on how those gatherings are organized or promoted.

Delray Beach Gives Subculture Coffee 90 Days To Address Parking Dispute After Heated Commission Fight - Boca Post
Delray Beach Gives Subculture Coffee 90 Days To Address Parking Dispute After Heated Commission Fight - Boca Post

An image circulated with the dispute lists activities including open mic, comedy, chess club night, art displays, trivia, bingo, movies, weddings, private events, club meetings, philosophy discussions, political gatherings, poetry readings, book club readings, improv performances, cooking class, charity groups, fundraisers, live performance, disc jockeys and student study groups, with “no” marked next to each.

Mayo has framed that as a direct contradiction at the heart of the city’s position: a coffee shop where people gather is being told gathering itself can trigger enforcement or require permits. He also said the space could be re-leased as a 50-seat restaurant without the same restrictions, which he argues makes the city’s position hard to square.

Residents turned out in support at the March 31 meeting. One customer told commissioners that Subculture appeared to be getting treated like it was on trial and said the city should be working with the business to find a solution. Support also spilled onto Facebook, where commenters backed Mayo, praised the business’s community presence, and criticized the city’s handling of the matter.

That support, though, does not resolve the legal and administrative issue in front of Delray Beach. Authority now sits with the city’s commission, legal staff and zoning process, all of which will shape whether Subculture can stay under revised conditions, win relief through appeal, or eventually relocate.

Mayo said Subculture is appealing rulings involving poetry and music and is also looking at a possible move roughly five minutes north to Boynton Beach, which he said has indicated it would welcome the business. At the same time, he has urged supporters to keep showing up at City Hall, arguing public comment is being constrained and the matter is bigger than one coffee shop.

For residents, the next thing to watch is whether Mayo produces a parking or operations plan within the 90-day window that satisfies commissioners, and whether the city shows any willingness to narrow the fight to a practical fix rather than a larger battle over use. For now, the future of Subculture in Delray Beach remains unsettled, with parking ratios, event restrictions and city discretion all wrapped into the same fight.

This story is part of our ongoing Delray Beach News reporting.

Palm Beach County Breaks Ground on New Westlake Elementary School Set for 2027 Opening

Palm Beach County Breaks Ground on New Westlake Elementary School Set for 2027 Opening

A new three-story elementary school is underway in Westlake as Palm Beach County school officials plan for continued growth in the area.

Coral Springs Moves Cinco de Mayo Celebration to May 1 With City Hall Concert

Coral Springs Moves Cinco de Mayo Celebration to May 1 With City Hall Concert

Coral Springs will host a free Cinco de Mayo-themed community concert on May 1 featuring live bands, family activities, and a new local business expo.

West Boynton Park To Open New Multi-Sport Turf Fields With Ribbon Cutting

West Boynton Park To Open New Multi-Sport Turf Fields With Ribbon Cutting

Palm Beach County Parks and Recreation will celebrate the opening of two new multi-sport turf fields at West Boynton Park on May 6.

Palm Beach County Civil Filings - April 29, 2026

Palm Beach County Civil Filings – April 29, 2026

Boca Post reviewed 59 new Palm Beach County Circuit Civil filings, including personal injury, insurance, business litigation, and foreclosure matters.

Boca Raton Morning Weather Update: Sunny, Hot, And Building Toward A Stormier Sunday

Boca Raton Morning Weather Update: Sunny, Hot, and Building Toward a Stormier Sunday

Thursday brings sunshine and a high near 87 in Boca Raton, with dry air and a late-day sea breeze. Heat builds into Saturday, then a front increases the chance for showers and thunderstorms Sunday into Monday, with heavy rain possible.