Ben's Chili Bowl

Ben's Chili Bowl Image 1.jpg
Ben's Chili Bowl Image 2.jpg
Ben's Chili Bowl Image 3.jpg

Name of Building

Ben's Chili Bowl

Town or City, Country where the building was originally established

Washington, D.C.

Date the building was designed and/or first built

Original Building Constructed – 1910. Restaurant Founded – 1958.

Name of Architect, Builder, or Primary Patron Responsible

Building Architect – Arthur B. Heaton (originally designed as the Minnehaha Theater). Restaurant Founders – Ben Ali and Virginia Ali

Builder - Early 20th-century construction commissioned for the Minnehaha Theater (specific contractor not widely documented)

Culturally Specific Time Period

Early 20th-Century American Commercial Architecture

Geo-Location

38.91938919543913, -77.02258769236296

Materials

Brick, Stucco and painted signage panels, added during later commercial adaptations. Wood framing and plaster interior elements. Glass storefront windows with metal framing

Size and/or Scale of Building

Two stories, though the restaurant primarily occupies the ground floor.

Architectural Type

Commercial

Formal Style

Exterior: Early Commercial / Theater Storefront Style. Mid-Century American Diner Signage.

Building Description

Ben’s Chili Bowl occupies a once-modest early-20th-century theater building whose architecture has evolved into one of Washington, D.C.’s most recognizable cultural symbols. Built in 1910 as the Minnehaha Theater, the structure’s brick commercial façade was adapted in 1958 when Ben and Virginia Ali converted the space into a neighborhood chili parlor. Over time, the building’s most distinctive architectural element became its vivid storefront signage, blending the proportions of the old theater façade with the bold graphic sensibility of a mid-century dinner. The shallow curved parapet and red-yellow color palette anchor the building visually on U Street’s historic corridor.
Inside, Ben’s Chili Bowl preserves a rare authentic mid-20th-century dinner interior. The long counter, classic stools, narrow circulation path, and textured wall surfaces remain largely intact, accompanied by new layers of cultural memory: photographs of civil rights leaders, musicians, and presidents who have visited the restaurant. Renovations in 2008 strengthened the building’s structure and systems while keeping its historic materials and language design intact.
Over time, the building transitioned from a silent movie theater to a family-run dinner that withstood the 1968 riots, economic decline, and urban renewal. Today, Ben’s Chili Bowl stands not only as a beloved local landmark but also as an architectural marker of continuity in a rapidly changing city, its preserved storefront and dinner interior embodying the cultural and social history of Washington, D.C.’s U Street corridor.

Names(s) and location(s) of the museum holding the object(s)

The building that was originally a silent movie theater now Renovated into this landmark restaurant.

Image source

Source
https://photos.cinematreasures.org/production/photos/292680/1575353793/small.jpg?1575353793
Source
https://wtop.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/AP5378600343143507-benschilibowl-1560.jpg

Creative Commons or other copyright information

Image 1-4: Creative Commons

Student First and Last Name

Justin Forster

Bibliographic references for the item

Source
- Wilson, K., 2020. Why Ben’s Chili Bowl, Home of the Half-Smoke, Is Hallowed Ground in D.C. AFAR [online]. 17 February. Available at: https://www.afar.com/magazine/why-bens-chili-bowl-in-washington-dc-is-a-dining-destination
[Accessed 8 December 2025].
Source
- Minnehaha Theater in Washington, DC - Cinema treasures (no date). https://cinematreasures.org/theaters/18967.
Source
- Robinson, E. (2025) 'A Washington landmark: Ben’s Chili Bowl,' Boundary Stones [Preprint]. https://boundarystones.weta.org/2017/12/07/washington-landmark-bens-chili-bowl.
Source
- Andrews, D. (2023) 'Ben’s Chili Bowl offering free Half Smokes to celebrate 65th anniversary,' WTOP News, 22 August. https://wtop.com/dc/2023/08/bens-chili-bowl-offering-free-half-smokes-to-celebrate-65th-anniversary/.

Citation

Building Architect – Arthur B. Heaton (originally designed as the Minnehaha Theater). Restaurant Founders – Ben Ali and Virginia Ali Builder - Early 20th-century construction commissioned for the Minnehaha Theater (specific contractor not widely documented), “Ben's Chili Bowl,” World Architecture, accessed June 28, 2026, https://worldarchitecture.artinterp2.org/items/show/192.

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