The Capital Grille's ten nearest neighbors span six different categories and nine different subcategories — a genuinely mixed cluster with no single dominant kind pulling the shape.
The scores run from 0.89 down to 0.85, a narrow band consistent with the flat shape. At the top, Fine Dining & Luxury Eateries (0.89) is the one neighbor that shares The Capital Grille's own subcategory. Immediately alongside it, Ben & Jerry's (0.89) and Ruth's Chris Steak House (0.88) round out the restaurant presence — but Ruth's Chris is classified as Casual Dining, not Fine Dining, and Ben & Jerry's sits in Bakeries, Desserts and Confectioneries. Beyond those three, the restaurant category disappears from the top 10 entirely. What fills the remaining seven slots is a cross-category mix: UBS Group (0.87) in Banking; REI (0.86) in Sporting Goods and Outdoor Gear; Courtyard by Marriott (0.86) in Mid-range Hotels; and apparel entries vineyard vines (0.85), Chico's (0.85), and Williams-Sonoma (0.85) and Tiffany & Co. (0.85) in General, Womens, Home Goods, and Jewelry respectively. No single subcategory accounts for more than one neighbor beyond the center's own kind.
The flat, cross-category spread indicates an audience whose shape is recognizable across a wide range of retail, hospitality, apparel, and financial brands — not one tightly defined by any single consumption vertical.