What'll happen to Toronto's iconic Patrician Grill sign after the restaurant closes?

Hearts across Toronto broke with the news that the city's legendary Patrician Grill will close permanently in the spring 0f 2026, but curiosity still permeated: if the restaurant is leaving, what'll happen to its equally iconic sign? For better or worse, all things must pass, and, as of May 9, that'll be true for King East landmark, Patrician Grill. Originally founded in 1953, the diner was taken over by the late Louie and Helen Papas, who immigrated to Canada from Greece in the early '60s. Today, the restaurant remains in the Papas family: run by the couple's son, Terry and son-in-law, Chris (husband of the Papas' daughter, Mary). Thanks to its proximity to the George Brown St. James campus, the old-school diner has been a hit among college students for generations, though its old-school charm and surprisingly good food made it a nostalgic go-to for all walks of life in the city. The restaurant's retro appeal strikes you well before you even set foot inside, thanks to the commanding presence of the diner's iconic sign: a large, red, low-hung beacon that reads "grill" in illuminated neon letters, below the name "Patrician" and above the slogan "good food" in bold white letters. It's the sort of sign, particularly in a city that's increasingly being taken over by slick, glass towers, that makes a person start walking to it before they even know if it's actually attached to a functioning restaurant or merely a kitschy relic of a bygone Toronto. With a bit of age-related wear and tear around the corners, it's the sort of sign you can imagine hanging in the exposed-brick loft kitchen of an inexplicably wealthy millennial creative on a network sitcom. A bona-fide street-level landmark. If you can't tell, I really love this sign. So, when Terry and Mary Papas announced that the restaurant would be closing permanently, the natural question arose in my mind: What happens to the sign once the restaurant is no more? Mary tells blogTO that, since her and her brother's announcement, the response from the public has been "overwhelming," with customers hailing from as far away as Scotland sending well-wishes. "Customers have also been asking for items," she tells blogTO: "very surprising." But, if you have hopes of mounting the legendary Patrician Grill in your very own industrial-chic sitcom loft kitchen, you're sorely out of luck: Mary tells blogTO that she, Terry and Chris won't be giving it away any time soon. "We plan on taking the sign down and with us when we finally leave," Mary says. Fair enough. While the sign is a piece of Toronto history for those of us lucky enough to have crossed timelines with the Patrician Grill, for the Papases, it's a piece of family history, and that, from where I'm standing, is worth more than any Patrician Grill fanatic can write in their chequebook. Still, all of the love the restaurant has been getting since the closure announcement has stoked an extra degree of familial pride for Mary Papas. "I wish my parents were here to experience the reaction of everyone," she tells blogTO. The Patrician Grill is located at 219 King St. E.