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Four months later, a second unit opened in Pittsburgh, by 1956: 11 units, 1960: 27 units, 1965: 30 units, and by 1973: 40 Eat'n Park locations. [12] After leaving Big Boy, the chain entered Ohio and West Virginia, and eventually grew to over 75 restaurants. [1] In 2017, there are 69 Eat'n Park restaurants operating. [4]
When the 25 year franchise agreement expired Eat'n Park dropped Big Boy, attributed to the loss of drive-in popularity but primarily motivated by the end of the $1 per year license fee the franchise had enjoyed. [167] Pittsburgh area Big Boy rights were reassigned to Elby's in 1977. [168] [D]
Prime Restaurants: Eat'n Park: Family United States (Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia) 64 A Big Boy franchise until 1974 Eddie Rocket's: Family Ireland 42 This restaurant is similar to Johnny Rocket's. Eddie V's Prime Seafood: Seafood United States 21 Ed's Easy Diner: Casual dining United Kingdom 24 1950s-style diner El Fenix: Tex-Mex
Jul. 24—Officials from Eat'n Park are proposing a 1,400-square-foot addition to their Murrysville location that will expand the dining room and add a drive-thru window. ... Right now 49 of our ...
In its latest round-up, Yelp ranked 50 of the top places to eat in the area for 2023 with restaurants from the downtown grid to Folsom, Roseville and Stockton.
CITY GUIDES: This west coast city, backdrop to countless films and TV series, is the trendy heart of OC living. Nicola Brady takes a deep dive – from surf beaches to shopping spots and sushi ...
With the closing of the Calimesa, California restaurant in 2020, only four locations remain using the full "Bob's Big Boy" branding, all in the Los Angeles, California area. Among those restaurants, two are now protected historic landmarks: the Burbank location on Riverside Drive and the Downey location, previously known as Johnie's Broiler.
Frisch's Restaurants, Inc., doing business as Frisch's Big Boy, is a regional Big Boy restaurant chain with headquarters in Cincinnati, Ohio. For many years a Big Boy franchisee, in 2001, Frisch's became the exclusive owner of the Big Boy trademark in Indiana, Kentucky, and most of Ohio and Tennessee, and is no longer affiliated with Big Boy Restaurant Group.