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These 5 Delaware restaurants have permanently closed

Restaurants close their doors for various reasons, but owners don't always share why.Here's a look at 5 places that have permanently closed within the past few weeks.Ruby TuesdayRuby Tuesday located in the Pike Creek Shopping Center at 4700 Limestone Road, closed its doors to the public on Tuesday, Jan. 7, according to Regency Centers, the shopping center’s commercial developer.The chain ...

Restaurants close their doors for various reasons, but owners don't always share why.

Here's a look at 5 places that have permanently closed within the past few weeks.

Ruby Tuesday

Ruby Tuesday located in the Pike Creek Shopping Center at 4700 Limestone Road, closed its doors to the public on Tuesday, Jan. 7, according to Regency Centers, the shopping center’s commercial developer.

The chain filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy in 2020 after struggling from years of increased competition and in the face of the pandemic, but kept its four Delaware locations open. The casual dining chain emerged from bankruptcy a year later as a much smaller company.

Two Ruby Tuesday locations remain in the First State: in Milford at 945 N. DuPont Blvd. and in Middletown at 474 W. Main St.

A Regency Centers spokesperson could not confirm whether a new tenant has signed on to take over the Pike Creek location.

Rasa Sayang

The owners of the 17-year-old restaurant in the Concord Mall, which formerly had been located in the Independence Mall shopping center near Fairfax, said it was closing its doors on Sunday, Jan. 19.

Rasa Sayang, which loosely translates to "Feel the Love," opened in 2008 in the Independence Mall shopping center. It moved into a larger space next to Boscov's in the Concord Mall in June 2020.

Rasa Sayang was known for its roti canai, a Southeast Asian pancake, as well as soups, noodle dishes and spicy curries. It also serves sushi.

No reason was given for Rasa Sayang's closing, announced on Wednesday, Jan. 8, in a message posted on its Facebook page. The restaurant thanked customers for their support.

Concord Diner

Located about 2½ miles away, at 2530 Concord Pike in Fairfax, Concord Diner posted on Thursday, Jan. 16 to its Facebook page that it was permanently closing. No date was given. Messages left at the diner were not immediately returned.

In July 2023, the Concord Diner popped open at the site of the former Touch of Italy. The Italian restaurant operated at 2530 Concord Pike from 2018 until closing in April 2020 due to the pandemic, according to a post that Touch of Italy founder Bob Cipretti posted on its Facebook page. It never reopened for business.

The building, next to the Charcoal Pit, had operated before that for about four years as a Big Fish Restaurant Group restaurant known as Bella Coast Italian Kitchen & Market. The sprawling space had 150 seats.

Concord Diner touted that it was open for 24 hours soon after opening.

A farewell note on Thursday, Jan. 16, on the restaurant's Facebook page reads: "After careful consideration, we have made the difficult decision to close our doors permanently. We want to express our sincere gratitude for your support. It has been our pleasure to serve you, and we will cherish the memories made here. Thank you."

We got word that the site will be reconfigured this summer as a French-themed restaurant under new ownership.

Stay tuned for more updates. We'll let you know more when we know more.

Red Robin, Dover

Dover’s Red Robin, located at 40 N. DuPont Highway, quietly closed down on New Year’s Eve, to the surprise of community members and employees alike.

R&R Realty, the site’s commercial developer, confirmed that another tenant had been signed on to the building, but could not confirm what tenant that was.

The location initially opened up during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. There are four remaining Red Robin locations in Delaware.

Hardee's, Bear

The Hardee’s restaurant located at 1801 Pulaski Highway in Bear closed early in January.

Its franchisee, Summit Restaurant Holdings, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2023 and has since closed dozens of stores around the country, including one in Elkton, Maryland.

Delaware still has eight Hardee’s locations around the state.

Chick-fil-A, Concord Mall (temporarily closed)

The Chick-fil-A in Concord Mall posted on its Facebook page that it would be temporarily closed for remodeling.

“Not goodbye, just ‘See You Soon!’ as we have officially begun construction on our remodel” the chain posted on Monday, Jan. 13. “We will be back, with waffle fries and big smiles, just like always!”

No reopening date has been revealed as of yet.

Patricia Talorico writes about food and restaurants. You can find her on Instagram, X and Facebook. Email [email protected]. Sign up for her Delaware Eats newsletter.

A new swimming pool is coming to Pike Creek. Plus, kids' programs and maybe a Dash In

Pike Creek Shopping Center is seeing a lot of activity these days.Which is to say, it's filling with things to do and not just places to shop — part of a trend that's been sweeping retail centers all over the country, as big-box stores become trampoline parks or fun centers.Half the former Kmart at Pike Creek is now a full-serv...

Pike Creek Shopping Center is seeing a lot of activity these days.

Which is to say, it's filling with things to do and not just places to shop — part of a trend that's been sweeping retail centers all over the country, as big-box stores become trampoline parks or fun centers.

Half the former Kmart at Pike Creek is now a full-service gym called Edge Fitness. A one-time toy store has become a ChristianaCare-operated urgent care center. At Pike Creek, Tiger Kicks will teach your kids taekwondo, while Brain Balance might help children learn how to focus.

By the end of this year, you'll be able to add swimming lessons and character-building strength training to the list. Yup, you read that correctly: Pike Creek is getting a new swimming pool.

And, if early proposals come to pass, a new-school gas station mini-mart and restaurant may park itself in the Pike Creek parking lot. Plans filed in April call for a potential Dash In gas mart with a 3,500-square-foot convenience store and restaurant, serving up hot wings and loaded quesadillas.

Here's what's in the works for Pike Creek.

Goldfish Swim School

4760 Limestone Road, 302-665-1590, goldfishswimschool.com/pike-creek. Projected opening by end of 2024.

A swimming pool is coming soon to Pike Creek Shopping Center.

In the tight row of retail across from the Acme, beneath a taekwondo school and a soon-to-open training center for young minds and bodies, Goldfish Swim School is busy building a 25-foot-by-75-foot swimming pool at 4760 Limestone Road.

The school, which teaches would-be young swimmers from the ages of 4 months to 12 years old, is an outpost of one of the faster-growing franchises in the country — a Michigan-based swim school co-founded by a former national swimming champion that now has more than 150 locations.

A former investment banker, franchisee Greg DeRise, and his wife, Alexandra, first encountered a Goldfish school when it came time for their 2-year-old to learn how to swim. They became so enamored with how the school was run they decided to get into the business.

Alongside partner Anthony Pistilli, the DeRises have already opened Goldfish locations in Malvern and Media, Pennsylvania. The Pike Creek school will be their third, and they hope to be open by the end of 2024.

The swimming pool's primary purpose is instructing kids, DeRise said, and keeping them safe in the water.

"We will have some birthday parties. It's open family swim times as well," DeRise said, "but our core focus is just keeping kids safe in and around the pool, and then part of that is teaching them how to swim."

The pool is just 4 feet deep, which allows adult instructors to stand during classes, and is heated to a "shiver-free" 90 degrees. Classes are $31 per weekly session, billed monthly.

KidStrong

4758A Limestone Road, 302-633-3435, kidstrong.com/locations/pike-creek. Projected to oepn by autumn.

Just upstairs from the splashing kids at Goldfish, KidStrong will be a training program for both bodies and minds, said franchise owner Adrienne Meehan, who also runs a KidStrong location in Middletown and plans yet another in the North Wilmington area.

KidStrong will open by late summer or early fall, Meehan said, in the upstairs space at 4758A Limestone Road. The training program is designed for children 11 and younger.

The sales pitch for KidStrong is heady, promising to "help parents discover their child’s superpowers and build future-ready kids who are confident making friends, run the playground, and raise their hand high in the classroom. In other words … kids who win at life."

The first thing Meehan, a former Division I field hockey player, tends to mention when she talks about her programs is "character."

The idea behind KidStrong, familiar from youth athletics going back generations, seems to be that through fitness games and physical play, you can help kids put together the building blocks to succeed.

"Obviously, we promote physical fitness. We keep them active. Really, the biggest component of our programming is our character building," Meehan said. "We're working on independence, confidence, public speaking, socialization, teamwork, leadership, self-regulation, all through athletic play."

Memberships start at $99 a month for one 45-minute class a week. The Pike Creek location is already preregistering members.

Dash In

4266 Limestone Road (proposed)

The newest proposal at the Pike Creek Shopping Center is also the least assured.

Plans are still in the exploratory stage, but Pike Creek property owners Regency Center have received conditional approval to turn part of the southeastern edge of the Pike Creek Shopping Center parking lot into a Dash In gas station with a 3,500-square-foot convenience store and restaurant.

Dash In is a Maryland-based chain that has recently positioned itself to compete with Wawa, Sheetz and Royal Farms for the premium gas station market — with plans to expand in Delaware. The company hopes to triple in size, representatives told Delaware Online/The News Journal.

A new generation of large-format Dash In locations offer "wholesome" food offerings like fresh-baked bread and "freshly cracked" eggs. As an answer to Wawa's hoagies, Dash In has expanded its previous offerings to double-stacked burgers, hot wings and loaded-up "Stackadilla" quesadillas.

The chain has opened a pair of next-generation stores in Delaware, one at Middletown's Northside shopping center and one across from the New Castle airport. A third has been proposed in Newark in the location of the Rodeway Inn along Route 896.

Early plans for the Dash In appear to accommodate a newer, large-format store.

With plans still in their early stages, some are already trying to head them off. A website called savepikecreek.com, put up anonymously in May, asks Pike Creek residents to complain to public officials about the proposed Dash In, calling a gas station at the large shopping center an "inappropriate development."

The Save Pike Creek website offers no information about who opposes the gas station, nor any means of contacting the website's owners. A message sent to an email address attached to the website's privacy agreement was returned as undeliverable.

Matthew Korfhage is business and development reporter in the Delaware region covering all things related to land and money: openings and closings, construction, and the many corporations that call the First State home. Send tips and insults to [email protected].

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