White Castle opens new Whiting location after historic building demolished
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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowWhite Castle reopened Wednesday in Whiting, in the lot previously home to the oldest location of the fast food chain in the Chicagoland region. The previous 88-year-old building was closed and demolished in March to be replaced with a modern rendition.
The new location, 1879 Indianapolis Blvd., is double the size at 2,997 square feet with seating for up to 50. It pays homage to the old building with a local artist Adan Ramirez’s mural in the dining room and a plaque outside in the new outdoor park and seating area.
New technology will also be on display with an automated robot in the frying station and AI-powered menu boards for taking drive-thru orders. No positions have been eliminated, the company said in a news release; instead, employees will have more time to spend with customers.
Staff members, leadership and Whiting Mayor Steven Spebar celebrated the reopening Wednesday morning with a ribbon cutting.
The original White Castle was built in 1935 — 14 years after the Columbus, Ohio-based restaurant was created in 1921 — and was remodeled and expanded in 1956. It featured the original White Castle logo and was a white porcelain-clad castle of a restaurant, according to our partners at Times of Northwest Indiana.
Pieces of the old building are now housed at the Whiting-Robertsdale Historical Society Museum, the Times reported.