OvermodGet Lady Firestorm on the case as to when various parts of that diner were remodeled.
Here's a brief Wiki article that hits the high points of the Summit Diner story.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summit_Diner
This is not to say there haven't been some slight modifications to the interior, but the basic diner is still relatively intact from 1938. At least it hasn't been what Lady Firestorm calls "Lou-Roc'ed," after the Lou-Roc diner up in Massachusetts that began as a traditional stainless diner but has been heavily remodeled to the point of being unrecognizable as a classic diner. As far as Lady F's concerned if it's been "Lou-Roc'ed" it's not a diner anymore, even if it's a good place to eat.
I love diners - and I do mean the old train car style diner. Here in Lansing, the FLeetwood is one of few places to get a hot meal at 4AM.
http://thefleetwooddiner.com/
And I grew up in Silver Spring, MD, where lives the Tastee DIner
https://www.tasteediner.com/
There is an actual Union Pacific railcar, still on its trucks, on Sunset Boulevard in LA -- serving hot dogs and the like.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TitU2PFrxfw
Menu is here.
http://places.singleplatform.com/carneys-express-2/menu?ref=google
Get Lady Firestorm on the case as to when various parts of that diner were remodeled. The floor is 1928, as is that 'clerestory' roof hommage, but those curved windows and wood paneling are just like the 'cutting-edge modern' of a 1947 Spartan aluminum trailer...
Diners are kind of rail related, since they are modeled after railcars.
"Nothing could be finer..."
No, not that kind of diner, this kind of diner! An old classic! Not railroad-related, but then we're here for nostalgia anyway, right?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p_rMaWSznU0
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