The long-vacant Barbec’s building on Garland Road, the midcentury diner that packed in crowds for its beer biscuits, is back in the neighborhood spotlight. The freestanding spot near White Rock Lake has sat dark since a 2020 kitchen fire, but it has resurfaced on commercial listing sites and in a recent Instagram walkthrough, putting East Dallas on watch yet again to see whether the next tenant restores the retro dining room or slaps a chain logo over that asymmetrical roofline.
Property Is For Lease Now
The building at 8949 Garland Road is being marketed as a retail and restaurant site with roughly 2,000 to 2,829 square feet available and an asking price of $35 per square foot annually, according to LoopNet. Commercial real estate listings describe the freestanding structure, listed as year-built 1965, as partially built out and ready for a new tenant. Brokers are pitching it as suitable for restaurant use and say it is available for immediate occupancy.
A Familiar East Dallas Landmark
Barbec’s started life as a Howard Johnson’s building and was turned into a family diner by Barry and Becky Brown in 1978, eventually earning citywide attention for its beer biscuits and loyal weekend lines. The restaurant changed hands in 1999 but stayed a White Rock institution until a kitchen fire on Oct. 3, 2020, inflicted roughly $175,000 in damage and shut down the dining room, according to reporting by The Dallas Morning News. Since then, the building has been sitting in a kind of nostalgic limbo for neighbors who still tell stories about those breakfasts.
Paperwork Once Promised A Popeyes
State project filings list a Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen planned for 8949 Garland Road, describing a new 2,561-square-foot quick-service restaurant with a drive-thru and a reported start date in July 2022, according to the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation. Local coverage noted that a certificate-of-occupancy application and construction permits named Popeyes as the intended tenant and that leasing representatives had acknowledged a restaurant lease on the site, per Advocate Magazine. On paper, it looked like a franchise build-out was on the way, but the chain never opened there, and no storefront has appeared.
Why The Plans Stalled
The gap between what is in the filings and what is on the ground shows up clearly in commercial databases. Property platforms continue to market the freestanding building as available for lease while state records still list work on file. PropertyShark’s listing for the site, updated in April 2026, shows the building being marketed to restaurant tenants and lays out square footage and lease terms for would-be operators. It is the kind of outcome that pops up when franchise deals shift, construction timelines slide, or tenants quietly change course after permits are submitted.
Instagram Tour Shows Repairs
A recent Instagram reel highlighted in local coverage shows the interior patched up, with a replaced roof and a new HVAC unit, visible signs that whoever controls the site has put mo65
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