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In 1989, Bob Giaimo and Ype Von Hengst opened the original Silver Diner in Rockville, Maryland.This original location has annual sales of $6 million. [3] Silver Diner Development LLC. operates 23 restaurants [4] in the mid-Atlantic region of the United States with locations in New Jersey, Maryland, Virginia, and Washington D.C. and employs over 1,700 people.
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Bethesda Tastee Diner. The Bethesda location was the second to open, in 1939. The location was originally on Wisconsin Avenue, but in 1958, the diner car was picked up and moved to its current location on Woodmont Avenue. The original car only had six booths and the counter stools that can be found there today.
Bethesda is a very wealthy and well-educated area. According to the 2000 census, Bethesda was the best-educated city in the United States of America, with a population of 50,000 or more. 79% of residents 25 or older have bachelor's degrees, and 49% have graduate or professional degrees.
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At the height of the chain, there were almost 50 locations. Duncan sold the chain in 1981. The chain had troubles in the 1990s [1] and the last restaurant closed on April 29, 2008, [2] [3] although the Laurel location was re-opened that year as Laurel Tavern Donuts after being given the recipe for the burgers, [4] which it still served as of 2022.
Interior of a Moby Dick restaurant in Springfield, Virginia. Founder Mike Daryoush emigrated to the United States from Iran in 1975. He opened a small sandwich shop in 1987 in Bethesda, Maryland, serving a few Middle Eastern dishes. He changed to a Persian menu and added a clay oven in 1989. [5]
In 1977, the company moved to the Round House Theatre, located in the former Bushey Drive Elementary School in Silver Spring, MD. [1] In 2002 the theater moved to a brand new facility in downtown Bethesda, which was a significant upgrade. [2] In 1982, the company was incorporated as a nonprofit under the name "Round House".