Neha Patil (Editor)

Doggie Diner

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Established
  
1948

Current owner(s)
  
owned by Al Ross

Country
  
USA

Founded
  
1948

Closed
  
1986

State
  
California

Dress code
  
casual

Food types
  
Hot dog, Hamburger

Doggie Diner Doggie Diner Dog Heads Listed as Top San Francisco Food Mascot by SF

Doggie diner history


Doggie Diner was a small fast food restaurant chain serving hot dogs and hamburgers in San Francisco and Oakland, California that operated from 1948 to 1986, owned by Al Ross. The first Doggie Diner was opened on Oakland's San Pablo Avenue in 1948 and grew in popularity. At one time there were 30 locations around the San Francisco Bay Area, mostly concentrated in San Francisco. The chain went out of business in 1986 after trying to compete with big chain restaurants, such as McDonald's and Burger King. Its founder Al Ross died in 2010, at age 93.

Contents

Doggie Diner 1000 images about Doggie Diner on Pinterest Plymouth Cas and

Doggie diner head returns after a makeover


History

Doggie Diner Quirky Berkeley John Law39s Three Doggie Diner Heads

The most notable feature of the Doggie Diner chain was the sign, a 7-foot (2.1 m) tall rotating fiberglass head of a wide-eyed, grinning dachshund dog, wearing a bow tie and a chef's hat. These famous dog head signs were designed in 1965 or 1966 by Bay Area billboard and ad layout designer Harold Bachman. After the Doggie Diner went out of business, all the large dog head signs were taken down and many were resold to private parties. In 2001, one of the dog signs, restored and refurbished by the city of San Francisco, was installed on a median strip at Sloat Boulevard and 45th Avenue, near San Francisco's Ocean Beach and the San Francisco Zoo in the Outer Sunset neighborhood. On August 11, 2006, the Doggie Diner dog head became a San Francisco landmark No. 254.

Doggie Diner Doggie Diner 2 San Francisco Photograph by Robert Altaffer

In December 2000, The Doggie Diner head was featured in Zippy The Pinhead comics as "the doggie" in grassroots effort to save the heads

Doggie Diner farm4staticflickrcom345633710132254dbd8a32dajpg

Zippy frequently participated in his long-running conversation with the giant fiberglass doggie mascot. In 2004 Laughing Squid, a San Francisco Web site sponsored three of the dog heads, named Manny, Moe & Jack, as the "Holy Dogminican Order" to take the dog heads cross-country for an art show in New York City.

Doggie Diner The Last Doggie Diner Finds A Home

In 2013, Yarn artist Olek crocheted bright colored yarn over three of the dog heads as an art piece.

Doggie Diner The Floating Doggie Diner Head Lost SF

"Doggie diner!" was the battle cry of the Batwinged Hamburger Snatcher (BWHS) character from Dan O'Neill's Odd Bodkins weekly newspaper comic strip.

References

Doggie Diner Wikipedia