Sol's Sandwich Shop: Difference between revisions

From Bhamwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Creation)
 
No edit summary
 
(12 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Sol's Sandwich Shop''' was a small restaurant located in the basement of the [[John Hand Building]] known for its 90 cent cheeseburgers and 80 cent hamburgers. Opened in [[1972]] by  [[Saleh Bajalieh]], the restaurant took its name from Saleh's nickname "Sol." It would close on [[June 24]], [[1994]], after increasing rents resulted in the operation moving to a new location in [[Columbiana]].
[[Image:Sol's logo.jpg|right]]
'''Sol's Sandwich Shop and Deli''' was a restaurant in the [[Two North Twentieth]] building along [[Morris Avenue]].
 
The original Sol's was a small restaurant located in the basement of the [[John Hand Building]] known for its 90 cent cheeseburgers and 80 cent hamburgers. Opened in [[1968]] by  [[Saleh Bajalieh]], the restaurant took its name from Saleh's nickname "Sol", and served grilled burgers alongside "camel rider" sandwiches and other specialties.  
 
When [[AmSouth Bank]] vacated the John Hand Building and sold it to investors, the sandwich shop lost its lease and was forced to close. [[June 24]], [[1994]] was its last day of business. Bajalieh and his family briefly operated a [[Garden Cafe]] in [[Columbiana]] and later took over operation of the "Break Room" cafeteria at [[U.S. Pipe|U.S. Pipe & Foundry]]'s [[Dimmick Pipe Company|pipe plant]] in [[North Birmingham]].
 
In [[2008]] real estate broker [[Bill Arant]] recruited Bajalieh's sons [[Jeff Bajalieh|Jeff]], [[Chris Bajalieh|Chris]] and [[Jason Bajalieh|Jason]] to revive the Sol's Sandwich Shop name. Before making the offer, Arant consulted [[Gus Koutroulakis]] at [[Pete's Famous Hot Dogs]]. Gus assured him that "Those are three hard-working boys. You won't go wrong," and the three, with lots of help from their mother, [[Nadia Bajalieh|Nadia]], jumped at the chance to pay homage to their father's business. Sol's re-opened in July a block away from the [[John Hand Building]], in a space at the [[Two North Twentieth]] building next to [[Blevins Barber Shop]].
 
The restaurant closed during forced shutdowns due to the [[2020 Coronavirus pandemic]].


==References==
==References==
* Walton, Val (May 6, 1994) "Sol's 'quiet place to eat' to close". ''Birmingham News''.
* Walton, Val (May 6, 1994) "Sol's 'quiet place to eat' to close". {{BN}}
* Swagler, Susan (November 7, 2008) "Dining review: Sol's Sandwich Shop & Deli." {{BN}}
* Poor, Jon (October 7, 2010) "Sol's" ''Birmingham Weekly''
* Carlton, Bob (September 30, 2016) "Meet the restaurant family that has fed Birmingham for a half-century." {{BN}}
 
==External links==
* [http://solsdeli.com/ Sol's Sandwich Shop] website


[[Category:Former restaurants]]
[[Category:Sandwich shops]]
[[Category:20th Street North]]
[[Category:Morris Avenue]]
[[Category:John A. Hand Building]]
[[Category:1968 establishments]]
[[Category:1994 disestablishments]]
[[Category:2008 establishments]]
[[Category:2020 disestablishments]]

Latest revision as of 11:08, 11 June 2020

Sol's logo.jpg

Sol's Sandwich Shop and Deli was a restaurant in the Two North Twentieth building along Morris Avenue.

The original Sol's was a small restaurant located in the basement of the John Hand Building known for its 90 cent cheeseburgers and 80 cent hamburgers. Opened in 1968 by Saleh Bajalieh, the restaurant took its name from Saleh's nickname "Sol", and served grilled burgers alongside "camel rider" sandwiches and other specialties.

When AmSouth Bank vacated the John Hand Building and sold it to investors, the sandwich shop lost its lease and was forced to close. June 24, 1994 was its last day of business. Bajalieh and his family briefly operated a Garden Cafe in Columbiana and later took over operation of the "Break Room" cafeteria at U.S. Pipe & Foundry's pipe plant in North Birmingham.

In 2008 real estate broker Bill Arant recruited Bajalieh's sons Jeff, Chris and Jason to revive the Sol's Sandwich Shop name. Before making the offer, Arant consulted Gus Koutroulakis at Pete's Famous Hot Dogs. Gus assured him that "Those are three hard-working boys. You won't go wrong," and the three, with lots of help from their mother, Nadia, jumped at the chance to pay homage to their father's business. Sol's re-opened in July a block away from the John Hand Building, in a space at the Two North Twentieth building next to Blevins Barber Shop.

The restaurant closed during forced shutdowns due to the 2020 Coronavirus pandemic.

References

  • Walton, Val (May 6, 1994) "Sol's 'quiet place to eat' to close". The Birmingham News
  • Swagler, Susan (November 7, 2008) "Dining review: Sol's Sandwich Shop & Deli." The Birmingham News
  • Poor, Jon (October 7, 2010) "Sol's" Birmingham Weekly
  • Carlton, Bob (September 30, 2016) "Meet the restaurant family that has fed Birmingham for a half-century." The Birmingham News

External links