Denver’s Landmark Preservation office on Friday declared Tom’s Diner potentially historic, a decision that buys community members who are interested in preserving the 52-year-old restaurant more time to save it.
Denver residents have until June 7 to apply for landmark designation on behalf of the building. If the city doesn’t receive any applications by then, the restaurant will receive nonhistoric status, allowing it to be razed within the next five years.
Earlier this month, Alberta Development Partners, based in Greenwood Village, applied for nonhistoric status along with their proposal to redevelop the Googie-style diner, for sale at 601 E. Colfax. Tom’s is one of three original White Spot restaurants — a chain that spread across Denver in the mid-20th century — remaining. The developer wants to build an eight-story apartment building in its place.
RELATED: Tom’s Diner could soon be demolished to make way for an eight-story apartment building
But the diner has potential for historic designation based on its location, a “prominent feature of” East Colfax; its design, by Googie architects Armet and Davis; and its early life as a White Spot restaurant under William F. Clements, according to the city.
“The building is associated with the mid-20th century commercial development of E. Colfax, a key example of the roadside architecture once common along this stretch of road, but now increasingly rare,” the Landmark Preservation office’s report stated. “(Tom’s Diner) is also one of the best examples of Googie architecture in Denver, representing a style that is rapidly disappearing.”
Related Articles
-
Denver’s top chefs are holding a bake sale for Planned Parenthood
-
Not that kind of edible: CBD now on the menu at Denver bars and restaurants
-
One of Colorado’s oldest bar-restaurants reopens in Golden this weekend
-
13-year-old Lola Coastal Mexican unveils new chef, look and menu
-
Mall food just got an upgrade at the Dairy Block’s new Free Market
You can see Tom’s Googie-style architecture in its “dynamic roof form with expose(d) trusses, highly visible location, projecting eaves, large plate glass windows, geometric forms, and combination of building materials included stone, brick, and stucco,” the report said.
Tom’s is one of three remaining White Spot diner buildings of nine that Clements built in Denver in the mid-20th century. The others are Denver Diner, which sold last year and is also on Colfax, and Los Toritos Mexican Restaurant, on East Colfax in Aurora.
Tom Messina, the owner and namesake of Tom’s Diner, is selling his property after 20 years in business, for $4.8 million.
Updated May 20, 2019 at 5:33 p.m. The following corrected information has been added to this article: Because of a reporting error, this story has been updated to reflect that White Spot was a local restaurant chain in Denver.