
The Diner Finder is the Internet’s best source of real diner information.
North Hollywood, California — Casey Hallenbeck almost learned the hard way the challenges of moving a muli-ton antique.
Hallenbeck owns Phil’s Diner, which he’s kept in storage for better than a decade now. Closed up in the late 1990s during the construction of the new subway line that coursed through the neighborhood, Hallenbeck has hand plans to move the diner to a new development on the drawing board for several years since. Now that it looks like those plans will come to fruition, he started a blog to chronicle his progress.
Last week, however, Hallenbeck reported on his blog that the riggers hired to move the diner to its new location almost dropped it. Using two cranes to lift the 1920s vintage structure, something caused the diner to slip off of the steel beams supporting it.
The posted photos don’t show too much detail, but had Hallenbeck consulted with someone who actually had some experience moving these things, he could have saved himself a lot of money and grief.
First of all, cranes are rarely needed to move such small diners — never mind two of them. When using cranes, the rigger must place the beams in the right place beneath the undercarriage to properly distribute the stresses from lifting. Put in the wrong place, and the diner collapses. Indeed, the photos indicate that this almost happened with Phil’s. One photo clearly shows the diner buckling while lifted from its cribbing.
Fortunately, the diner sustained minimal damage during the move according to the blog. Hallenbeck still plans on an April, 2010 opening.
Follow the progress of Phil’s Diner here.

by Sarah Rolph Tilbury House Publishers, Gardiner, MaineSoft cover, 120 pages, $20.00 In A1 Diner, Sarah Rolph compiles the best recipes from… Read more

Thanks to a recent story published in the Washington DC City Paper and in honor of the soon-to-be-open Capital City… Read more

By Peter Genovese Rutgers University Press, Rutgers, 2003 $14.95, 225 pages, hardcover Genovese does it again. By combining his true reporter nature… Read more

Tour of the Petrogiannis Philly Diner Empire Last night, I took a writer for Philadelphia Magazine on a little tour of… Read more

We had some discussion of late about the idea of creating the opposite of the Lou-Roc Award, given to an… Read more

The Paris of Appalachia, Pittsburgh in the Twenty-first Century by Brian O’NeillCarnegie-Mellon University PressPittsburgh, PA. $16.95 Back in 2001, right after… Read more

Update: The Yankee Diner closed in the fall of 2010 and reopened in January, 2011 with new ownership. We understand… Read more

Fret not, diner purists. We brought our own maple syrup for these very good banana pancakes. No, we didn’t try… Read more

Sometimes you don’t know what happened to you until after it’s over. My recent breakfast visit to the Red… Read more

Paula Huber says she’s “a dying breed,” but don’t call the coroner yet. She’s much too busy — teasing her customers,… Read more

Taking the Family Roadside into the Catskills for some R&R reveals a sad diner situation and a café for the… Read more
We interviewed Mr. Ed from Mr. Ed’s Elephant Museum in Orrtanna, Pennsylvania in May 2002. We hoped to put together… Read more

The Highland Park Diner is easy on the eyes, a tidy barrel-roofed gem on South Clinton Street in Rochester, New… Read more

Update, July 2011: This story actually has a happy ending. In 2007, Chris Blanchard purchased the Worcester Deluxe 101 from… Read more

Many long years ago, Roadside Magazine ran an a photo essay cleverly entitled “Boy Meets Grill,” celebrating the guy at… Read more