Last week, I  was out in Long Island scouting around Jericho Turnpike, which, if you have  never had the pleasure of driving, is one of those hellish, strip mall-lined  highways with traffic lights that are perfectly synchronized to make your travel  time as long as possible.
As I was  driving, I happened to notice a McDonalds sign up ahead. Nothing too special  about that, except where the McDonalds should have been, there seemed to be a  big white mansion. Maybe it was around back or something?
And then I  realized
The  mansion was  the McDonalds.
Holy.  Crap.
This 100+ year  old Georgian mansion is indeed a McDonalds, and while well known to locals, it  totally caught me by surprise. I practically expected a maître to greet me as I  went inside.
Known as the  Denton House, its bones date back to 1795, when it was constructed as a farm  house by one Joseph Denton, a descendent of the founder of the village of  Hempstead . In 1860, it was given a Georgian makeover, complete with gingerbread  ornamentation, and throughout the 1900s, found commercial use as a funeral home  and a series of restaurants. By 1986, it was  abandoned and on the verge of falling down.
McDonalds  purchased the property with the intention of tearing it down and replacing it  with a standard McDonalds restaurant. Thank God for the citizens of the New Hyde  Park , who worked to secure landmark status for the building in 1987.   McDonalds had  no choice but to restore the property and work within the parameters of the  landmarks commission, which ultimately resulted in their most beautiful  restaurant in America (if you know of a better example, please let me  know).
It was decided  to restore the property to its 1926 appearance, based on an old photograph.  Opened in the early 1990s, the house remains in fantastic shape to this  day.
One of the  mansion most striking aspects is its beautiful glassed-in  veranda.
which offers a  pretty unique McDonalds eating experience (how cool would it be if it was  actually open, or covered by screens?).
But the details  continue around on its eastern side.
from its  shuttered windows and brick chimneys to its eaves dripping with gingerbread  ornamentation:
The western  half is equally stately.
though, ER, me  thinks the drive-through might not be original to the Denton  farmhouse:
But had someone  showed me this picture, I would have NEVER guessed it was a  McDonalds.
Unfortunately,  the inside has been totally gutted and redone without much  inspiration.
Still, it is  far more unique than your typical McDonalds, with a grand staircase leading to  an upstairs dining area.
Also, there is  something fascinating about being in an enormous open-air mansion, and I  definitely appreciate how the roof has been revealed.
Almost as an  afterthought, the small ordering area is nestled to one  side:
I love the New  Hyde Park McDonald, if for no better reason than how clearly it makes the  argument for historic preservation.
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