The neon sign outside of Silver Crest Donut Shop will no longer shine brightly at night — the long-running 24-hour restaurant and bar is now closed as of Monday, July 29, the San Francisco Standard reports. Since the news broke, it’s been a crowded field of news articles displaying both appreciation and candor around the mythos of this restaurant at 340 Bayshore Boulevard. The interior of the doughnut shop has been described as “something from a David Lynch film” or a “portal to another dimension.”
“Hard to pinpoint exactly when the clock stopped,” a 2023 Alta profile reads, “but judging by the fonts and the color scheme and the pinball and the fried ham and the jukebox selections and somehow the quality of the air you breathe, the planet’s orbit of the sun halted in the late ’70s or early ’80s.”
Some of Silver Crest’s history has been pieced together over the years, separating fact from fiction. George and Nina Giavris moved to San Francisco from Greece in 1959 and purchased Silver Crest in 1970. They have long claimed they lost the front door key years ago and, famously being a 24-hour institution, had little use for it. At its peak, the restaurant had 20 employees, which had since dwindled to five employees — a chef, dishwasher, George and Nina Giavris, and their niece Pamela Rekas, according to a Los Angeles Times story in December 2023.
Determining the quality of the food itself depends on who’s wielding the pen (or keyboard). As Standard reporter Astrid Kane writes, “Noir-ish and confounding, the Silver Crest was no one’s idea of an excellent place to eat.”
“Were they donuts, though?” wondered KQED writer Gabe Meline of the signature item. “Those five-inch-diameter puffs of dry bread, topped with a tart glaze that only made them taste weirder?”
Other stories, however, detail regulars who have eaten breakfast at the Bayshore diner daily, such as a customer who told Alta he’s been dining there since his early 30s (and who notably, at the time of the story, was 84 years old). This same regular is present in the Los Angeles Times piece, and the familiarity and affection between staff and the regular is seen as Rekas coaxes the customer to take his daily medication.
But even as the restaurant obits have rolled in, there is a sliver of hope that it could return. Mission Local reports that neighboring business owners shared that George Giavris is recovering from a hospital stint and “the family will decide whether or not to open the diner again after Giavris’ recovery.”
But for now, Silver Crest has closed. Los Angeles Times columnist Frank Shyong asked George Giavris when he would quit. He told Shyong that if Silver Crest closes, it’ll close forever. “I said we never close, so we never close. If you promise something you keep the promise. Or don’t promise,” George Giavris shared.
“You never know what time and place you will die,” he told Shyong. “I follow the Greek philosophy: Any good that comes will come with bad. Any bad that comes will come with good. The time you have, enjoy it, and relax, and always prepare.”