Shed gets another lease on life
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Dave Brooks
Once a rowdy biker bar, then a famous hamburger joint and breakfast
spot, the Shed on 5th Street is about to enter its third incarnation:
Italian restaurant.
The historic white building, which has sat empty for a year since
former owners Bill and Phil Gallegos retired, is about to be
revitalized by business partners Michael Savage and Ed Bernardino.
The pair hired former BJ’s Pizza & Brewery manager Frank Savage,
cousin of Michael Savage, to run the yet-to-be-named restaurant and
get it open before Memorial Day weekend.
In May, local pub owner John Gallagher purchased the building and
agreed to lease it to the pair. Savage and Bernardino never opened a
restaurant before, but the real estate moguls have experience in
Italian food. Savage owns Lino’s Italian Cuisine and Pizzeria on
Edwards Street in Huntington Beach and the two share an ownership
interest in Augustino’s in Garden Grove. Bernardino also owns a
Chinese restaurant in Santa Ana.
The pair has about 60 days to complete a major remodel of the
restaurant known for its red brick interior and large, north-facing
windows. The men want to redecorate the rear patio that runs along an
alleyway shared by several businesses on Main Street, but they plan
to keep the Shed’s historic wood bar in tact and remodel an entrance
deli area into a cafe.
“That’s going to be the casual element of this family restaurant,”
Savage said. “It’s Huntington Beach, so we want it to be accessible
to everyone.”
The Shed was first built in 1924 during the city’s oil boom days
and was a pool hall and then a garage, former owner Phil Gallegos
said.
In the 1950s, the building began to change hands many times,
reborn in each exchange as a rowdy biker bar with names like the Old
Southlander, Grape and Ale, and 5th Street Saloon.
When Phil Gallegos and her husband, Will Gallegos, took over the
restaurant in 1983, they struggled to change the tough-guy image of
the watering hole famous for its bar fights and bullet holes in the
fire place.
“Our neighbors were really worried because of all the problems in
the past,” she said. “There were so many fights that usually ended on
a nearby front porch with a couple people crashing through someone’s
window.”
Making the transformation was difficult, Gallegos said.
“In the first six months, I told a lot of people that I did not
want them here,” she said. “I think we turned away more customers
than we took in.”
The new restaurant will seat about 250 people, Bernadino
estimates, and serve mostly traditional Sicilian dishes, focusing on
light pastas and seafood dishes by former Duke’s chef Jason Triail.
“This is just our next move,” said Savage. “We really wanted to be
Downtown. This is a great period for growth in Huntington Beach and
we wanted to be a part of it.”
The pair’s plan to open the restaurant on 5th Street comes at a
time when city planners are trying to revitalize Downtown’s second
most traveled arterial street. A mixed-used development designed by
local architect Jeff Bergsma will soon be built in an empty lot next
to the restaurant. Construction teams are also laying the groundwork
for the massive Strand shopping mall and hotel, just a block away
from the Shed.
“We’re hoping to catch a lot of those people as they’re leaving
the Strand. We think it will be really good for business,” said
Bernardino.
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