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Gateway Diner 5 of 5

Up close, the onset of neglect is apparent.

 

Skip to image one, two, three, four, or five.

 

(Gateway Diner 1939-2006)

 

The Gateway Diner was exemplary of the intimate art deco style structures built by the Fodero Dining Car Co. A business this size relies more on the passion of the owner than business savvy. Doug Grina of Al's Breakfast in Minneapolis, a fourteen seat operation with a line of customers often stretching out the door, once said to me (Me! an anonymous customer), "I told my wife I'll never get rich doing this, but I will always be doing what I enjoy. Good thing she's got a job [too]." The Gateway diner was run for the last quarter century of business by Joe Phillips. He maintained a loyal customer base that, in later years, turned the parking lot into a classic car show every Tuesday night. But he was approaching 80 near the turn of the century and the workload became a bit much. His grandson took over management, promising to keep it running as long as he lived - nearly a decade longer. You can read more in the mini biographies published posthumously in the local paper and on the American Roadside website.

 

The listing in the Diner directory still shows a tiny photo from its operational era.

 

See it from the sky.

 

Edit: I used stereophotomaker to correct for camera tilt (converging verticals) and replaced the originally posted image. I also used Noisware, in demo mode, to make the noisy greys homogeneous. This also makes it look better large.

 

Elsewhere on Flickr (another perspective)

Mod*Betty focussed on the reflection in the window, walked around the lonely vestibule and looked in the window.

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Uploaded on June 1, 2009
Taken on June 16, 2009