Last week, I was out in Long Island scouting around Jericho Turnpike, which, if you’ve never had the pleasure of driving, is one of those hellish, strip mall-lined highways with traffic lights that are perfectly synchronized to make your travel time as long as possible.

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As I was driving, I happened to notice a McDonalds sign up ahead. Nothing too special about that, except where the McDonalds should have been, there seemed to be a big white mansion. Maybe it was around back or something?

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And then I realized…

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The mansion was the McDonalds.

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Holy. Crap.

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This 100+ year old Georgian mansion is indeed a McDonalds, and while well known to locals, it totally caught me by surprise. I practically expected a maitre d’ to greet me as I went inside.

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Known as the Denton House, its bones date back to 1795, when it was constructed as a farm house by one Joseph Denton, a descendent of the founder of the village of Hempstead. In 1860, it was given a Georgian makeover, complete with gingerbread ornamentation, and throughout the 1900’s, found commercial use as a funeral home and a series of restaurants.

By 1986, it was abandoned and on the verge of falling down.

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McDonalds purchased the property with the intention of tearing it down and replacing it with a standard McDonald’s restaurant. Thank God for the citizens of the New Hyde Park, who worked to secure landmark status for the building in 1987.

McDonald’s had no choice but to restore the property and work within the parameters of the landmarks commission, which ultimately resulted in their most beautiful restaurant in America (if you know of a better example, please let me know).

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It was decided to restore the property to its 1926 appearance, based on an old photograph. Opened in the early 1990’s, the house remains in fantastic shape to this day.

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One of the mansion’s most striking aspects is its beautiful glassed-in veranda…

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…which offers a pretty unique McDonald’s eating experience (how cool would it be if it was actually open, or covered by screens?).

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But the details continue around on its eastern side…

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…from its shuttered windows and brick chimneys to its eaves dripping with gingerbread ornamentation:

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The western half is equally stately…

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…though, er, methinks the drive-through might not be original to the Denton farmhouse:

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But had someone showed me this picture, I would have NEVER guessed it was a McDonald’s.

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Unfortunately, the inside has been totally gutted and redone without much inspiration.

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Still, it is far more unique than your typical McDonald’s, with a grand staircase leading to an upstairs dining area.

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Also, there’s something fascinating about being in an enormous open-air mansion, and I definitely appreciate how the roof has been revealed.

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Almost as an afterthought, the small ordering area is nestled to one side:

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I love the New Hyde Park McDonald’s, if for no better reason than how clearly it makes the argument for historic preservation. We can live in a world of this…

McDonald's Restaurant, Miles City

…or this:

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Really don’t have anything else to add.

-SCOUT

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  1. Mike Ragan Avatar
    Mike Ragan

    I just started working in Garden City Park the week before this was originally posted. I had seen this before driving by on the way home from a job I was working at up in The Bronx … Jericho’s sometimes quicker than the LIE 😉 But I didn’t know what town I was in, just passing thru, and at rush hour I wasn’t about to stop.

    But now I work less than a mile from here and have gone here for lunch quite a few times. I work in construction and love old architecture so I had to see it up close. Amazing restoration of the outside and incredible reconstruction of the interior as an open atrium structure.

    Sitting there eating your Bigmac you sure don’t feel like you’re sitting in a Mickey D’s – LOL.

  2. Chris Sobieniak Avatar
    Chris Sobieniak

    Toledo, OH once had a very lovely McDonald’s in the south part of town near the now-demolished Southwyck Shopping Center. I can’t find any pics of it at the moment, though one guy bothered to do a video of it’s exterior here, though I don’t care for his opinion on the matter.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBYjE0SolSg

    From what I recall asking someone on it (perhaps at the restaurant itself which I also recall was very unique inside), the place use to be a bank before becoming a McDonald’s sometime in the 1980’s. Sometime in the past decade the building was torn down and a new McD’s was built in place I think, shame really they didn’t keep it looking this way.

  3. Dr. Von Hayek Avatar
    Dr. Von Hayek

    while yes this is cool, I find it wrong that people did not care about this as a historic site UNTIL someone with money bought it. If they bought it in ‘86 and it was later added to the historic list in ‘87 it is not fair to force the new owners to take on the task of preservation. Once they have it on the historic register the new owners would not be able to sell it unless the new owners were willing to restore it thus get locked into it. please don’t get me wrong, I think it is a great idea to restore and preserve these things, I just think it is wrong to force a company to do it like this.

    1. paul Avatar
      paul

      While I understand and appreciate where you’re coming from, I don’t completely agree with you. To a multi-billion dollar company, the money required to complete this renovation is comparable to pennies in your pocket. Those who pushed for the historic status did so because they didn’t have the money to renovate the house themselves, in addition to the fact that they refused to see over 150 years of history be demolished and replaced with some run-of-the-mill McDonald’s.

  4. Donna Smith Avatar
    Donna Smith

    This was my Great Uncle Louie’s restaurant, Luigi’s. His family lived upstairs and the restaurant was downstairs. He sold the restaurant in 1956. It became the Charred Oak Manor before it became McDonalds.

  5. Rod Trexler Avatar
    Rod Trexler

    McDonald’s of Biltmore Village, Asheville, N.C. USA

    http://blueridgetravelguide.com/2012/01/biltmore-village-mcdonalds-asheville-nc/

  6. Ghaost Avatar
    Ghaost

    “we can live in a world of this or this”

    Or we could live in a world of neither? bullshit false choice.

  7. HH Avatar

    Mc’Donalds at Nyugati (Western Railway Station Building) in Budapest, Hungary
    https://www.google.hu/search?q=nyugati+mcdonald%27s+budapest

  8. Jery Kilker Avatar
    Jery Kilker

    I think the lesson is that local support for historical recreation is very important. McDonald’s should be congratulated for responding to local planning demands but, probably,would not have come up with this solution on its own. A public spirit – and organization – is necessary in a community with a well-developed image of itself.

  9. Kristen Avatar
    Kristen

    My dad is the actual owner/operator of this McDonald’s…he also works really hard for the community at large! We really appreciate your business…keep it coming!

    1. Mary Lou Avatar
      Mary Lou

      My understanding was that your dad is a doctor and this was a project of your mothers. I may be wrong, and yet this is what I heard.

  10. bill Avatar
    bill

    Does this McDonalds fill the fries compleyely or just half full?

  11. Lou J Apa Avatar

    What a concept…I love it and the community that had the foresight to allow/approve this concept by the owners is to be commended for true patriotism. Using these old mansion type structures is a good idea! Thanks for this news item.
    lja/JMJ

  12. Buster Avatar

    It reminds me of the movie Richie Rich with the McDonald’s that was in their Castle.

  13. Matthew N. Petersen Avatar
    Matthew N. Petersen

    The MacDonalds in Leavenworth Washington may be the most beautiful MacDonalds that looks like a MacDonalds.

    https://ssl.panoramio.com/photo/30362207

  14. H. White Avatar
    H. White

    Dear God, This is precisely everything about America I loathe.

    Imagine, this beautiful house turned into a squalid Mickey D’s. It is to weep.

  15. Wonks Anonymous Avatar
    Wonks Anonymous

    The argument for historic preservation should take into account the costs. NOWHERE are those mentioned, presumably the author doesn’t know. In the absence of such information, how can one evaluate?

  16. Nick Avatar
    Nick

    I believe this was the old Westbery Manor.

  17. Jamie Anne Avatar
    Jamie Anne

    As a few others have mentioned above, Freeport, ME has a quaint Victorian styled McDonalds as well.

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/mudder_bbc/435695431/

    While the interior of the one you found, in New Hyde Park, is certainly more lavish, than that of Freeport’s, the one in Maine is still quite charming. I live in New Brunswick, Canada, and my family summered in New England, usually at Old Orchard Beach. My sister and I always LOVED the McDonalds in Freeport. As an adult, my girlfriends and I do Black Friday shopping in Freeport and Kittery at the outlets. I’m still enchanted by the charm of Freeport, and love eating at McDicks in a house 😛

  18. Kathy = cousin Avatar
    Kathy = cousin

    My cousin owns this McD. He is a great employer, treats his employees very well and gives back to the community, employees. He is a very generous person overall to community Church employees.

  19. Mike Avatar
    Mike

    This is the place my family (the Montaruli’s)once called home. My Grandfather and father bought the old place back in the 1940’s and renovated the downstairs to an Italian resturant and bar. We lived upstairs up until grandpa and dad leased it to the rib place and later sold it. Brings back great memories though. I’ve never eaten in a more beautiful McDonalds.