The Arizona Republic

Riding into the sunset:

Iconic Scottsdale haunt, following lead of other Western-themed businesses, will close June 28

- BETH DUCKETT THE REPUBLIC AZCENTRAL.COM GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O

After nearly 60 years in business, the iconic Pinnacle Peak Patio in Scottsdale, famous for snipping the necktie of any patron who dares wear one, announces it will close in June, another Wild Westthemed casualty of urban developmen­t.

One of Scottsdale’s oldest restaurant­s will follow the bootsteps of Greasewood Flat and Rawhide Western Town into the unmarked grave of the city’s nearly forgotten Western icons.

Pinnacle Peak Patio will close on June 28 after nearly 60 years in business. It’s the latest Western vestige to be replaced by suburban sprawl in what was once a remote area of north Scottsdale.

Generation­s of visitors, hankering for an Old West experience, have set foot in the dusty, wooden establishm­ent, known for its 2-pound porterhous­e steaks and hodgepodge of neckties dan- gling from the ceiling.

The hideaway will be replaced by the Reserve at Pinnacle Peak Patio, a neighborho­od of 50 patio homes at the foot of Pinnacle Peak.

“It’s sad,” but it’s also “change and progress,” said Lisa Cyr, a Pinnacle Peak Patio spokeswoma­n.

“It’s not good or bad,” she said. “If there wasn’t a market for it, it wouldn’t be happening.”

A“no neckties” policy was started by the original owner of the restaurant, who wanted to keep the atmosphere casual, Cyr said.

Some Phoenix businessme­n wandered in to eat, and the owner warned them “to take their ties off, or he would cut them off,” she said.

By restaurant estimates, more than a million other ties have been clipped and added to the rafters since then. Employees will count the ties in an effort to reach a “Guinness World Records” title for largest tie collection, Cyr said.

Pinnacle Peak Patio follows other Western landmarks that have closed in Scottsdale, including the Greasewood

Flat saloon, which closed in March, and Rawhide, which moved to the Gila River Reservatio­n in 2005.

A report outlining details of the new developmen­t says the economy, a shift in demographi­cs and, according to Cyr, competitio­n from newer, more modern restaurant­s contribute­d to Pinnacle Peak Patio’s end.

The owners of the restaurant have been searching for a new location, though nothing has turned up yet, Cyr said.

A new spot would have to be “smaller, scaled down,” she said.

“Patio space is obviously a huge thing for us,” Cyr added. “Remoteness is not necessaril­y feasible anymore.”

The restaurant and Western entertainm­ent venue started as a small store that sold beer and bait to fishermen traveling to nearby lakes.

In June 1957, owner Bill Depue began serving simple steak dinners, cooked over mesquite wood, with salad and cowboy beans. The original shack burned down, and two years later, Depue bought 10 acres down the road where the current steakhouse sits.

These days, the restaurant is known for its red-and-white checkered tablecloth­s, sawdust-covered floors and photos of celebritie­s and politician­s who have visited over the years.

As a child, Steven Spielberg shot his first movie, “The Last Gunfight,” there in 1958, Cyr said.

“He was trying to become an Eagle Scout,” she said. “He used ketchup bottles for fake blood.”

On a recent Friday morning, people parked in the restaurant’s dirt lot to snap photos of the restaurant, which resembles the rustic towns popularize­d in Western movies. And longtime employees remembered the restaurant during its heyday.

Scott Browning began work at Pinnacle Peak Patio in 1979.

At age 16, he became a dishwasher and worked the kitchen and grill before moving up the ranks to manager.

Back then, Browning recalled, “we did two gunfights a night, on Friday and Saturday.”

No one lived in the area, he said, and the drive to north Scottsdale at night was dark except for headlights from vehicles.

Marvin Dickson, known as Big Marv, began grilling steaks at Pinnacle Peak Patio in1961. The 73-year-old chef said he’s upset about the closure and doesn’t want to retire quite yet.

“I just hate to see it go down like this,” he said. “But it’s what has to be done.”

Big Marv said he met his wife at nearby Reata Pass 47 years ago. The Western image means a lot to his family, including his three boys, who also work at Pinnacle Peak Patio.

“I guess I’m from the old school, and I’d like to see it keep going,” he said.

The chef owns much of the Western memorabili­a in the steakhouse.

 ?? MICHAEL SCHENNUM / THE REPUBLIC ?? Lisa Cyr, a Pinnacle Peak Patio spokeswoma­n, and Scott Browning, the restaurant’s manager, stand beneath some of the neckties hung from the restaurant’s ceiling over the past six decades. The restaurant opened in June 1957 and will close June 28.
MICHAEL SCHENNUM / THE REPUBLIC Lisa Cyr, a Pinnacle Peak Patio spokeswoma­n, and Scott Browning, the restaurant’s manager, stand beneath some of the neckties hung from the restaurant’s ceiling over the past six decades. The restaurant opened in June 1957 and will close June 28.

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