Cracking eggs and smiles: New diner coming to downtown OKC’s west side
By Molly M. Fleming
The Journal Record
OKLAHOMA CITY – The city’s west side will have a new diner by early 2016.
Shannon Roper and Aly Branstetter of S&B’s Burger Joint are creating a restaurant that they think is needed in the market, Branstetter said.
“We wanted a place where we can go get home-cooked food like you would have on a Sunday morning, and not be so weighed down that we can’t do anything the rest of the day, and a place that’s not so high-end I had to fix my hair,” she said. “There wasn’t a place where we could go, so we decided to make one.”
Sunnyside Diner will be in the former Mid-Town Service Center at NW Sixth Street and Classen Boulevard. The building sits on the corner, but the diner will be in the all-glass side that faces Sixth Street. Construction has started and an opening is anticipated for February 2016.
The diner will offer breakfast and lunch from 6 a.m. to 3 p.m. The menu has recipes from Roper’s mom, with Hillbilly’s chef Norm Thomas adding some tweaks. Urban Agrarian will supply local eggs, and Henderson Coffee will provide the daily roast. The diner will have a liquor license and offer mimosas, bloody mary’s, and other concoctions to get one’s day started.
Robot House Creative design company created the logo and tagline for the company. Brian Winkeler with Robot House said he asked Branstetter and Roper what would be a theme song for the restaurant, and one answer was Lionel Richie’s Easy Like Sunday Morning.
Now, the restaurant wants people to feel like “It’s always Sunday morning,” as seen in the tagline.
Winkeler’s design sets the diner’s aesthetic, with a vintage, clean feel and a bright, cheery sunny egg. His team also created the re-branding for Hillbilly’s, formerly Hillbilly’s Po Boys and Oysters.
Inside Sunnyside, customers can sit at the bar, a booth or a table. The wall will have black-and-white photos of the city’s west side during its earlier years.
While the west side might have been bustling years ago, it’s nearly vacant compared to downtown’s east side. Branstetter said she and Roper think the area will be the next big place, with housing under construction, the 21c Museum Hotel in development and more apartments planned.
“When you think about that (tagline) and see that logo, we want people to know that the warmest, happiest people are going to be serving you these amazing dishes that your mom cooked or Grandma cooked every Sunday,” she said. “It’s going to be a bright, uplifting place that will give you great stuff.”
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