Despite the mess, Harwin appears happy. He
has a vision of the future this dilapidated diner gleaming as brightly as it
did when it was new. This is history, he declares. You cant throw away history. A subcontractor interrupts Harwins vision of
the future to discuss the stainless steel hes suggested using for the window
moldings. The moldings would look fine to almost anyone else, but Harwin
doesnt think theyre shiny enough. He admits later that few of the diners
future patrons will notice his extra attention to detail. A lot of times, its not one part or two
parts, its the sum of all the parts, says Harwin. You might not be able to
say this and this and this is good, but the layman will look at the diner and
it will look great. They may not know why, but its because everything is done
properly. Harwin is one of only a handful of people in
the United States who within the past few years have been restoring these
unique relics of Americas past. Diners have been around since the late 1800s,
but the years before and after World War II are considered their golden era.
The gutted diner for which Harwin was selecting window frames was a 1946 Silk
City, built in that year by the Silk City division of the Paterson Vehicle
Company in New Jersey. What
makes a diner a diner is a matter of debate, but generally its a place that
has a counter where people can sit on stools and eat, and perhaps booths for
additional seating. The long rectangular shape and numerous windows of many
diners make them appear to be converted railroad cars, but they rarely are.
Diners traditionally have been constructed in factories, then shipped in one
or more pieces to their sites. Richard
Gutman, whose business since 1979 has
been consulting on some fifty diner renovations, believes one reason for the
resurgence of diners in the Nineties ironically corresponds to why diners went
into decline in the Sixties: the rise of chain restaurants. Gutman, the author
of American Diner, Then and Now (Harper
Perennial,
1993), says many people have grown tired of predictable and impersonal chain
eateries. Its more interesting going to a diner, he
explains. The sole proprietorship is going to add more adventure to it
because you dont really know what the food is going to be like. Some refurbished diners serve as draws to
other businesses, most notably the half-dozen owned by Harley-Davidson
dealerships. Others operate as traditional stand-alone eateries. There are even
a few chains, including the Angels Diners, run by Denver-based ViCorp
Restaurants Inc. There are chic diners with menus that would
make a short-order cook drop his spatula. San Franciscos sleek Fog City Diner,
for instance, is a recreated rather than a renovated diner, and really more
restaurant than diner. Its menu includes items such as brandelli (a type of
pasta) with tomatoes, artichokes, and peas ($10.95) and barbeque roast quail
with pecan-cornbread stuffing ($15.95). And then there are diners with diner
food. On the menu of the renovated Clarksville Diner in Decorah, Iowa, theres
a tuna-melt platter ($3.25) and, for the big spenders, spaghetti with garlic
toast ($4). According
to Harwin, a diner that is thirty percent intact is worth restoring. He
typically spends three to twelve months renovating and shipping them to their
new locations. Prices vary depending on condition and size. Harwin was
offered one diner free if he would remove it from the site, and the owner of
another diner priced his at $70,000. As for the restoration itself,
he says, one might cost $20,000, while another more than $100,000, depending on
what needs to be done. Harwin says, for instance, if the diner needs to have
six seating booths that are beyond repair replaced, building new ones can cost
$4,000. But if the diner has booths that only need to be reupholstered, $3,000
can be saved. A hands-on entrepreneur, Harwin hires
laborers and subcontractors glaziers, carpenters as needed. When a
renovation has been completed, the new owner pays for the foundation and
additions such as restrooms, storage space, and any backroom kitchen space not
provided in the diners original design. Harwins workplace, a parking lot owned by a
shipping company, recently had three diners in various stages of restoration.
The shipping company connection is convenient and appropriate: A key thing to
remember about diners is that they can be moved. Harwin moves restored diners from where they
were purchased to where they will be set up, with a possible stop at a third
location for the restoration work. One trip, he says, can run from $1,500 for
shipping a small twelve-seat diner a few miles to more than $20,000 for shipping
an eighty-seat diner several hundred miles. Harwin recalls driving one route in
advance for moving a diner that was ten feet, four inches wide. He discovered
that construction had narrowed a road to ten feet. Changing the shipping route
added ninety miles and several hundred dollars to the
bill. Although there are predictable profits in buying and selling diners, Harwin says,
the risk is high in renovation work. Rotted framing hidden under wall panels or
difficulties obtaining replacement materials can quickly convert a profit of
several thousand dollars into a loss. As soon as you get involved in a renovation, there are so many variables,
there are no guarantees, he says. Harwins known for taking on
lost causes. Randy Garbin, publisher of Roadside,
a quarterly newspaper for diner fans, says Harwins work has shed a hopeful
new light on diners in bad condition. You look at them and you say, Well,
Steve Harwin has taken a diner worse than this and brought it back
to life, so anything is possible. Harwin bought the diner with the stainless
steel window moldings in Ono, Pennsylvania, near Harrisburg. After he completed
the renovation in Ohio, it was shipped to Boston where it will be used as a
training site by the Log School Settlement House. At the Big Dig Diner,
troubled youths will learn about the food industry while serving hungry
customers. Harwin says he paid $500 for the 1946 Silk
City. The Log School, however, budgeted $125,000 for the project. It paid
$35,000 to buy the renovated diner from Harwin, and the rest was spent for
shipping, a $33,800 addition, kitchen equipment, and other start-up costs. Harwin always aims for authenticity, though
he does make concessions to the modern world. For the 1946 Silk City, he
replaced a sliding door, popular in early diners, with a swinging door that is
more in keeping with todays building codes. He also shortened a counter to
make the diner accessible to the physically disabled. Harwin nevertheless remains
conscious of
imparting the diners original ambience. The swinging door, he says, will be
noticed by only the most avid diner enthusiast. In addition, the portion of
floor uncovered when the counter was shortened has been set with the same
yellow and gray mosaic tiles that cover the rest of floor. The average customer
will never guess the counter was shortened. Antique cars and boats are generally for one persons pleasure, he says, his gaze returning to the wreck that will soon be a gleaming, restored Silk City. When this thing is done, thousands of people will get the enjoyment of eating at a diner. | ||||
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