Los Angeles Times

Ruby’s serves its last shake from location in O.C.

Friday was the diner chain’s final day in business on the pier at Huntington Beach.

- By Matt Szabo Szabo writes for Times Community News.

The iconic Ruby’s Diner at the end of the Huntington Beach Pier, which has been serving beachgoers since 1996, had its last day of operation Friday before closing permanentl­y.

The location had been struggling in recent years, filing for bankruptcy in 2018.

Huntington Beach Mayor Kim Carr said Friday that the lease of the building, which is owned by the city, has been acquired by a group led by Alexander Leff as part of the bankruptcy proceeding­s.

“He has experience operating other restaurant­s, including one on Malibu Pier,” Carr said. “He’s looking to develop a seafoodthe­med restaurant.”

City spokeswoma­n Catherine Jun said the permitting process should take four to six months.

Ruby’s took over the spot from the End Cafe, which was destroyed during the great storm of 1988. Ruby’s was a favorite in Surf City for its location, prices and retrostyle­d surfing decor.

Other Orange County Ruby’s locations, including one on the Balboa Pier and restaurant­s on Coast Highway in Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach, are expected to remain open.

“We’re not going anywhere,” said David Saighani, general manager of the Ruby’s on Balboa Pier. “My phones are ringing. Everybody thinks we’re closing too, but we’re not going anywhere.”

By lunchtime Friday, dozens of people were lined up at the Huntington Beach Pier location to purchase one last burger, fries or one of the restaurant’s famous milkshakes.

Friends Lacey Shaylor and Kim Vanderwolk, both 27 and longtime Huntington Beach residents, said news of the closure was sudden.

“My whole childhood is some version of Ruby’s, whether that’s getting just a shake or eating a bunch of food,” Vanderwolk said. “Anybody who goes to the beach ends up at Ruby’s. We were talking about how we remember a specific order from our childhood. I’m going to get chicken strips and shakes ... that’s what I used to get.”

Jon Saavedra of Westminste­r came Friday with girlfriend Kayla Simms, whose first job was at Ruby’s in Huntington Beach.

“We wanted to come down and say goodbye,” Saavedra said. “It’s a little nostalgic for us. It kind of feels like a piece of the city’s closing, you know?”

Jessica Ogo of Costa Mesa had her first date with her husband, Donny, in 1997 at Ruby’s; he proposed to her at the end of the pier, just behind the restaurant, on Dec. 24, 2004. She said she was sad that Ruby’s, which housed Jan & Dean’s Tiki Lounge on the second floor, would be shutting its doors.

“I think it’s just one more thing that’s kind of changing,” Ogo said. “Those of us that have been here since we were born, it’s kind of sad to see all of the things that are going.”

Carr said she planned to go to Ruby’s on Friday afternoon to order — what else? — a shake.

“It is bitterswee­t to see them leave,” she said. “At the same time, I look forward to the new restaurant that’s going to be opening the next chapter for Huntington Beach.”

 ?? Raul Roa Times Community News ?? A LINE for takeout formed Friday at Ruby’s Diner on the Huntington Beach Pier, which opened in 1996.
Raul Roa Times Community News A LINE for takeout formed Friday at Ruby’s Diner on the Huntington Beach Pier, which opened in 1996.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States