The Columbus Dispatch

Jack’s Diner up for sale Downtown

- By Mark Williams mawilliams@dispatch.com @Bizmarkwil­liams

The owner of Jack's Diner has put the longtime Downtown restaurant up for sale and might close it unless he can find a buyer.

Chris Kowalski blamed his struggle to turn a profit on the years-long constructi­on in the alley where the restaurant is located, in addition to rising costs and struggles to find staff.

"Business has been down, and I'm not making any money," he said Tuesday.

Kowalski has owned the greasy spoon diner at 52 E. Lynn St. since 2004. He closed it for a time after the death of his wife in 2015 and reopened it in 2016.

Then the constructi­on started.

First, the city undertook an improvemen­t project for the alleys at Pearl and Lynn streets that took much longer than expected. That was followed by the start of the multiyear improvemen­t project at the Rhodes Tower, which is just on the other side of the alley. That $50 million project is expected to be completed next year, according to the state.

Scaffoldin­g covers much of the alley, including Jack's.

While the alley has been open throughout, the work has made it difficult at times to reach the Jack’s Diner owner Chris Kowalski, shown in 2016, has put the restaurant up for sale, citing years-long constructi­on in the Downtown alley where the building is located, plus rising costs and a shortage of staffing.

restaurant, Kowalski said. Noise and dust have been common.

There also are rising costs for utilities and the supplies and food he needs to run the restaurant, he said. Also, it has been tough to find workers.

"I have a great customer base, people who come in twice a week or three times a week," he said. "It kills me to sell it. This is what I know."

Ideally, Kowalski said, he'd like to find a buyer who would carry on with the Jack's name, and perhaps he could continue to run the place.

The restaurant dates to 1942.

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