
A building that once housed a beloved Washington restaurant will once again see diners lined up at the soda fountain and nestled in booths. Northside Diner is set to open its doors at 106 W. Main St., taking over the previous site of Winga’s Cafe, which had remained empty for 18 years. Co-owners Isabella and […]
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Click here to purchase a paywall bypass linkA building that once housed a beloved Washington restaurant will once again see diners lined up at the soda fountain and nestled in booths.
Northside Diner is set to open its doors at 106 W. Main St., taking over the previous site of Winga’s Cafe, which had remained empty for 18 years.
Co-owners Isabella and Ed Santoro bought the restaurant in 2020 and have spent the past several years pouring sweat equity into the building, restoring it as close as possible to its original state.
During the renovation process, Mr. Santoro uncovered a skylight, unbricked windows, and stripped approximately eight layers of flooring, while recycling and reusing materials to construct other parts of the restaurant.
“I reused essentially anything that I could,” he said, “any sort of appliance or, you know, hardware, anything that I could reuse, I did.”
The road to restaurant renovation wasn’t a linear one for the Santoros. Ms. Santoro was born and raised in Italy, moving to the states her senior year of high school when her mom, a Washington native, decided to return to her hometown.
Ms. Santoro majored in international relations at the University of Iowa and moved to New York City after graduating, but returned after a couple of years to help her mom manage Dodici’s Cafe, a popular dining establishment in Washington. Mr. Santoro helped with the restaurant as well, after working previously with flat roofing and building pole barns.
“I’m glad I did the New York City thing when I was young and you could put up with that,” Ms. Santoro said. “Since moving back, I just absolutely fell in love with the town and the pace of life and the people.”
Breathing new life into old building
Through her involvement as a volunteer on the Washington Hotel/Motel Tax Fund Administration Committee, Ms. Santoro learned from surveys that many residents wanted more dining options in town. “For years and years, we've walked past Winga’s countless times and thought ‘okay, somebody really needs to do something with this,’” she said. The Wingas gave their blessing to the Santoros to purchase the building, who named it Northside Diner as a nod to the restaurant that came before Winga’s, Northside Cafe. The rights to Northside Cafe’s name belong to a former restaurant in Winterset, so the Santoros settled on “Diner” instead. A ribbon cutting ceremony was held on the 96th anniversary of Winga’s Cafe opening, April 18, 1928. Members of the community flocked to the diner to celebrate, including some of the Winga family. The Southeast Iowa Union reported that Carol Winga, a former co-owner and the daughter of the original cafe’s founders, expressed happiness with the building’s renovation at the ceremony. "I think it’s just fantastic, what you have done,“ she said. ”It means so much to me, and my family, it’s wonderful," she said, in a quote from the newspaper. Currently, the plan is to open the doors to the public in approximately two to three weeks, pending completion of the staff roster. Operating hours will be from 7 a.m. – 8:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday, featuring a breakfast and all-day menu, with a dinner-only service available from 5-8 p.m. On Fridays and Saturdays, the atmosphere will shift to a bar setting, offering a limited food menu until midnight. “It’s a place where obviously it's a nice ambience, but you don't feel like you have to get dressed up to go there or leave the kids at home. We have great accent lighting, and the vibe for a bar that I think (is for) really every generation, but I'm really picturing millennials, older millennials, really enjoying it,” said Ms. Santoro. “I wanted a place where you could go hang out with friends without a bunch of TVs and without music that was way too loud,” said Mr. Santoro.-
- Books lining the walls of Northside Diner act as sound absorbers. Ms. Santoro said she purchased the books from Iowa Wesleyan University, when it shuttered last year.
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- Jen Santoro, Northside Diner’s kitchen manager, poses outside the walk-in cooler that was original to Winga’s Cafe.
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- Northside Diner kitchen manager Jen Santoro puts something away in the walk-in cooler, an original fixture in the previous restaurant that opened in 1928.
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- Isabella Santoro poses next to the pie counter, another original fixture they fixed up during remodeling.
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- Isabella Santoro stands in the center of Northside Diner. The wood floor, tin ceiling, skylight and soda fountain are all original fixtures of the building.
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- Ed Santoro uncovered a skylight in the dining area while remodeling. He also created the stained glass pieces hanging below, which represent the Santoros’ zodiac signs.