The 29 Diner opened on July 20, 1947. It was built by the
Mountain View Diners Company of
Singac, New Jersey. D.T. "Bill" Glascock (deceased) purchased the diner and had it shipped to a strip of land that he owned in Fairfax, Virginia. Glascock and his wife, Elvira "Curly," ran the diner for the first several years, and thereafter leased the building to a succession of business owners. In 1973, the Tastee Diner company bought the location and it became the
Tastee 29 Diner. In 1992, the diner was declared to be a
historic site. Marc Christian Wagner, an architectural historian from the
Charlottesville-based Preservation Associates of Virginia organization wrote the statement of significance. The opening of the statement declares: Thus, in 1992, the Tastee 29 Diner was added to the list of
National Register of Historic Places. In the late-1990s, Fredy and Ginger Guevara (Ginger being a former waitress at the 29 Diner in the mid-1960s) bought the location and restored its original name of 29 Diner. For years the diner was-open twenty four hours a day, seven days a week, with the exception being
Christmas Day. In January 2009, the diner began closing on Monday nights due to the
2008 financial crisis; however, in 2014 it was restored to being open 24 hours a day. In May, 2014, the 29 Diner went out of business under the operations of Fredy and Ginger Guevara, but the property lease was quickly picked up by Fairfax native John Wood, who planned to reopen it in the summer of 2014. After some delays, the diner reopened to the public at 12:01am on September 11, 2014. It was open 24 hours Tuesday through Sunday and closed on Monday. Two days before Thanksgiving 2021, a chemical fire near the kitchen resulted in closure of the diner until further notice. A
GoFundMe campaign by community members was approaching half of its collection goal within a week of the fire. ==Culture==