When the vintage factory-built Cheyenne Diner near Penn Station closed last April after 68 years in business, widespread dismay was quickly replaced with hope when a Red Hook man bought it for $5,000 and promised to move the prefab gem across the East River. But it's been almost nine months since the closure, and the diner's gone nowhere because, as it turns out, it's too big to be moved over the Manhattan Bridge, even in two pieces.
The next-best option would be to relocate the Cheyenne to the Brooklyn waterfront via barge; that would require transporting it to a pier on the Hudson River and using cranes to load it and unload it. But new owner Michael O’Connell tells Chelsea Now that's probably cost-prohibitive: "We’re going to see what the financial feasibility is of moving it that way. If not, we’ll just scrap the whole idea of moving it."
George Papas, the man who owns the site still occupied by the shuttered Cheyenne, insists he's "going to give them as much time as they need" to figure out a solution, but also says he wants the diner gone "within a couple months" so he can begin construction on a nine-story residential building. A third option under consideration would be to move a few of the Cheyenne's most iconic parts piece-by-piece and scrap the rest. Naturally the bottom line trumps nostalgia; O'Connell flatly adds that "if it’s not economically feasible, then we’re not going to do it."
Photo courtesy Triborough.




It doesn't look good...
www.forgotten-ny.com
Move it to Wall Street. It's about time that area had a business that was financially viable and didn't rob the taxpayers blind.
Is Red Hook via the Manhattan Bridge the only land route they can take?
How about simply putting it on a barge and reopen it there. New York's first floating diner!
The most logical way to move it by land would be through New Jersey via the GWB, one of the bridges to Staten Island, over the V-N and surface streets to Red Hook. Really, how hard can it be?
If it turns out to be cost-prohibitive, please don't start dinging O'Connell. He's trying to do the right thing, but if it's too expensive, then maybe the City or Landmarks will help.
How about that ferry that goes to IKEA?
Whirlybird?!
People are up in arms over the 96 year old woman who wants to remain in her apartment of 1 million years. Somehow, there is nostalgia for this disgusting, run down, greasy spoon. Let's preserve this edifice! We must figure out how to keep this rusted old dump alive!