The Cheyenne Diner, which opened in 1940 in New York City, shut its doors in April 2008.
The Cheyenne
Diner, which first opened in 1940, was split in two Monday night to
begin its move on a pair of flatbed trucks some 860 miles to its new
home near Birmingham.
The dining experience at the Cheyenne was
typical of many similar New York eateries, where more often than not,
you're guaranteed a hearty meal at a comfortable price.
After
taking a seat in a roomy booth or even at the counter, you check out
the flimsy paper placemat with innocuous historical information or a
simplified map of the Greek Isles.
A busboy places a glass of
ice water on your table. Then it's time to break out the reading
glasses and flex those muscles to heft the always lengthy menu. While
it may take you several minutes to sift through it, take comfort in
knowing that you may actually burn some calories by lifting this bible
of comfort food.
Unlike the sometimes stuffy pretense of a
formal restaurant, the diner experience is generally simple, while the
food offerings are diverse -- from apple pie to baked ziti and
everything in between.
While never known as a bastion for fine dining, the Cheyenne saw
brighter days before it unceremoniously closed on a chilly Sunday in
April 2008.
Originally known as the Market Diner until its
moniker was changed in 1986, the pre-assembled restaurant stood as a
rare classic definition of free-standing diners.
Its
streamlined, railcar-inspired design boasts a reverse-channel
illuminated neon sign. Horizontal and vertical stainless steel strips
border the colorful enamel panels and wrap-around windows on its
facade. Celebrities from Jerry Lewis to David Letterman entered through
its curved entryway lined with glass blocks.
But, like a beloved
baseball team whose owner has tossed in the towel, the Cheyenne is
moving to a new town for a new life in a new home.
The owner of
the diner, George Papas, wanted to change the flavor of the block and
replace the eatery with a multilevel condo building.
Enter
preservationist Michael Perlman, a 26-year-old patron saint of sorts
for unwanted diners. Perlman found out that the Cheyenne was facing
demolition and began to look for a guardian angel to save it.
He
connected with Alabama businessman Joel Owens, head of the investment
group NAIC, who saw the Cheyenne for sale on a Web site devoted to the
preservation of New York City structures and fell in love with its
"gorgeous structure."
"I like it better each time I see it,"
Owens said. "The barrel roof. The exterior facades are second to none.
I think it's the most beautiful diner in the world."
Owens and
his business associate, Patti Miller, have a grand vision for the diner
and eventually want to incorporate it as part of an entertainment and
historic area outside of Birmingham.
Once it's restored, which
could take up to a year, the Cheyenne will become the first
free-standing diner in Alabama, Owens said.
A longtime collector
of antique cars and Coca-Cola memorabilia, Owens is a firm believer in
the lessons that can be learned from the past.
"If you think
about what's wrong with today, in order to fix the problems of today,
you've got to look back... [to] when it was better," Owens said.
"I think [the diner] is symbolic of the glory days. Technology and more
money doesn't necessarily mean progress. We long for simpler times," he
explained. "These types of buildings can be an instrument for our youth
to learn from the past. Teenagers need a clean environment for
entertainment, a 'hang out.'"
The departure of the Cheyenne
Diner brings back some bitter memories for aficionados of historic New
York. The Moondance Diner encountered a similar fate in 2007, after it
was put up for sale by developers who purchased the land it was sitting
on and planned to build a hotel.
That summer, a couple from Wyoming found the Moondance's sale notice on the American Diner Museum Web site.
Perlman acted as a conduit there also, helping to broker the sale of
the 1920s diner located in the SoHo section of Manhattan, which the
couple planned to move to their home state.
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