Pie floaters were typically purchased in the street from pie-carts as a late evening meal. Pie-carts are typically a form of caravan/trailer/cart, originally horse-drawn, with an elongated "window" along one or both sides where customers could sit or (more usually) stand to eat their purchases. The pie-cart was typically moved into position at lunchtime and in the evening. As traffic became busier and on-street car-parking in demand, the carts evolved to have one window on the "footpath side", and were moved into position after afternoon peak-hour traffic had ebbed. They did business until late evening or early morning, after which they were returned to their daytime storage locations. South Australia has had pie carts in the Adelaide metropolitan area since the 1870s. In the evenings, the
Norwood pie-cart was located on
The Parade adjacent to the
Norwood Town Hall. It was also the only place where members of the public could buy draught
Hall's "Stonie"
ginger beer direct from the keg. In the
Adelaide city centre in the 1880s, there were 13 pie-carts operating in
King William Street and
North Terrace. By 1915 there were nine pie-carts in operation. By 1958 this had reduced to two:
Balfour's pie-cart on North Terrace outside the
Adelaide railway station, and
Cowley's in
Victoria Square outside the
Adelaide General Post Office. In 2007, the
Glenelg tram line was extended from Victoria Square along King William Street and North Terrace past Adelaide railway station, and the Balfour's pie-cart was forced to close. In 2003, the South Australian National Trust traced the history of the pie floater back over 130 years. The pie floater was recognised as a South Australian Heritage Icon by the
National Trust of South Australia, although it is now available at very few locations; among them are the
Café de Vilis, Enjoy Bakery on Norwood Parade, O'Connell Street Bakery,
North Adelaide and the
Upper Sturt General Store. ==See also==