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Miss Albany Diner

Miss Albany Diner
(formerly Lil's Diner)
A single-storey building in the shape of a railroad car, with an Art Deco facade in cream and maroon stripes situated next to a taller brick building
Miss Albany Diner in April 2010
Location 893 Broadway, Albany, New York
Coordinates 42°39′46″N 73°44′41″W / 42.66278°N 73.74472°W / 42.66278; -73.74472Coordinates: 42°39′46″N 73°44′41″W / 42.66278°N 73.74472°W / 42.66278; -73.74472
Built 1941
Architect Paterson Vehicle Company (Paterson, New Jersey)
Architectural style Art Deco
NRHP Reference # 00001278
Added to NRHP November 6, 2000

Miss Albany Diner (formerly known as Lil's Diner) is a historic diner in Albany, New York, built in 1941 and located at 893 Broadway, one of the oldest streets in Albany. Used as a set for the 1987 film Ironweed, which starred Jack Nicholson and Meryl Streep, it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 2000.

In 1929 the site was occupied by a lunch cart that provided hot food to workers in the area. It was succeeded by a prefabricated diner built by the Ward & Dickinson Dining Car Company. The current building was erected in 1941 and originally called Lil's Diner. It is a "Silk City Diner model, manufactured by the Paterson Vehicle Company in Paterson, New Jersey, one of the leading diner manufacturers of the time. The building is typical of the prefabricated diners that were common from the 1920s through the 1940s, built to resemble railroad cars and incorporating elements of Art Deco design. With its interior of cherry wood and porcelain enamelled steel and a geometrically tiled floor, it is one of the few pre-World War II diners in the United States in near-original condition. The interior was depicted by the photorealist artist Ralph Goings in his 1993 painting Miss Albany Diner.

The diner changed hands over the years and was called successively Elaine's, the Firehouse Diner, and the Street Car Diner. Its current name was shared by a chain of several now defunct Miss Albany Diners owned by Stillman Pitts which were popular in Albany during the 1920s, one of which (on Central Avenue) is explicitly mentioned in William Kennedy's novel Roscoe. When Kennedy's earlier novel Ironweed was made into a film in 1986, the diner was restored for use as one of the film's principal locations and given the name "Miss Albany Diner". At the time, a product placement bidding war ensued between Pepsi Cola and Coca Cola over whose logo would be on the top of the diner.


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