THEN: This nighttime view of Andy’s Diner, from 1963, shows how the restaurant’s rail cars were highly visible to traffic along Fourth Avenue South. For detailed notes on the history of the restaurant by historian and author Chuck Flood, see below. (Seattle Municipal Archives)NOW: At the former Andy’s Diner (now the Orient Express), designer-publisher Tom Eykemans and Vanishing Seattle founder Cynthia Brothers display their book, “Signs of Vanishing Seattle,” while collector John Bennett holds aloft an original Andy’s Diner sign featured therein. The Museum of History & Industry will host an event for the book Nov. 21. More info: VanishingSeattle.org. (Jean Sherrard)
Published in The Seattle Times online on Oct. 31, 2024
and in Pacific NW Magazine of the printed Times on Nov. 3, 2024
‘Vanishing Seattle’ book trains our eyes on local signs of the past
By Clay Eals
Funny, the word “vanish.” In a magic trick, when something vanishes, it suddenly disappears. But is what we cannot see really gone? What if it lingers in our minds and hearts? Sometimes, collective memory can be as strong — or stronger — than real, physical life.
Cynthia Brothers embodied such thoughts eight years ago in launching a social-media movement to document and celebrate well-known local places that seemingly drop daily from our view. She named it Vanishing Seattle.
Brothers, 43, has grown her mostly volunteer and partly grant-funded following to 117,000. Last year, she mounted a flashy exhibit in Pioneer Square and this year published a book, “Signs of Vanishing Seattle,” which returns to our consciousness the eye-popping branding remnants of more than 75 lost treasures.
Such as Andy’s Diner! If you moved to Seattle since 2008, you may not recognize this unpretentious eatery on Fourth Avenue South, at least by that name. (For the past 16 years, it’s been a Chinese restaurant and karaoke bar, the Orient Express.)
Long before stadiums arose in industrial Sodo, Andy’s Diner embraced the area’s rail-track milieu and created a colorful identity, easily seen from its busy arterial, by piecing together a building made of decommissioned railroad cars.
THEN: On April 6, 1954, namesake Andy Nagy poses on the stairs of his Andy’s Diner at 2711 Fourth Ave. S. (Seattle Municipal Archives)
In 1949, Andy Nagy started with one car at 2711 Fourth Ave. S.. Joined by nephew Andy Yurkanin in 1955, he moved it two blocks south in 1956 and eventually expanded to seven cars. The pair built it into a steakhouse and banquet facility — the most visible element of what became a local food-service empire — revered by a broad swath of return customers, including hungry newswriters.
THEN: A Feb. 13, 1955, ad in the Sunday magazine of The Seattle Times claims that Andy’s Diner served more than 150,000 people in three months. (Seattle Times online archives)
It wasn’t that railcar eateries were unusual. Such diners have deep roots in the East. It was more the flair of a fun image. “We are after a tradition, an atmosphere,” Nagy told Seattle Post-Intelligencer columnist Emmett Watson in 1959. A Seattle Times headline in 1973 added a playful pun: “Choo Choo Chew Chew.”
Hence Brothers’ affection for the fanciful Andy’s Diner sign, which collector John Bennett loaned for last year’s exhibit and is included in the “Signs” book. Other Seattle touchstones range from music venues and LGBTQ+ bars to record stores and even shoe and antique shops.
Some signs still hang on. A few, as with Andy’s Diner, are modified. Most have … vanished. The book likens them all to rabbits out of the proverbial hat.
To Brothers, they’re “love letters to the sign artisans and social landmarks that brought soul to our city, and a testament to their ongoing impact and legacies, still being felt today.”
WEB EXTRAS
Big thanks to Cynthia Brothers, John Bennett and Chuck Flood for their invaluable help with this installment!
To see Jean Sherrard‘s 360-degree video of the “Now” prospect and compare it with the “Then” photos, and to hear this column read aloud by Clay, check out our Seattle Now & Then 360 version of the column.
2 thoughts on “Seattle Now & Then: the sign of Andy’s Diner, 1963”
My family had a warehouse about 3 blocks from this restaurant. I picked up food for the front office once a week as a teen… Good memories… and the cheeseburgers were out of this world.
My family had a warehouse about 3 blocks from this restaurant. I picked up food for the front office once a week as a teen… Good memories… and the cheeseburgers were out of this world.
We loved Andy’s Diner. Fun enough for kids and food and wine suitable for food loving adults. I can almost taste the herb marinated steak!